LOCAL GOVERNMENT TO 1836.
In the mid
13th century Richard de Montfitchet (d. 1267) was
holding view of frankpledge and enforcing the assize
of bread and ale on his manor in East and West
Ham. (fn. 1) He also set up gallows, probably at Gallows
(later Stratford) Green. (fn. 2) In 1285 the abbot of
Stratford was claiming the view of frankpledge and
the assize of bread and ale on his manor of West
Ham. (fn. 3)
Only one medieval court roll has survived for the
manor of West Ham, that for 1463–75. (fn. 4) Courts
were then meeting three or four times a year, the
most important being in Whit week when the view
of frankpledge was held and a constable and two
aleconners appointed. Apart from a fragment of
1518 (fn. 5) the next rolls for the manor are for 1581 (fn. 6) and
1585–7, (fn. 7) when the court was appointing a constable, a headborough, and two aleconners. In
1650–9, during the temporary lordship of Robert
Smyth, it was appointing three headboroughs and
three aleconners, one of each for Plaistow, Church
Street, and Stratford wards. (fn. 8) It also appointed four
constables: in 1650 two of these were for Stratford
ward and the others for Church Street and Plaistow,
but from 1651 those three wards had one each,
the fourth constable being for Upton ward. The
division of West Ham into wards was also used in
the parochial administration, as shown below. The
fact that the court of West Ham manor was appointing the Upton constable suggests that by 1651
Robert Smyth was also exercising jurisdiction over
West Ham Burnells and its associated manors. (fn. 9)
In the 18th century, after the manor of West Ham
had been temporarily divided, separate courts baron
were held for its Stratford section, for which rolls
survive for 1736–1802. (fn. 10) It is not known whether
courts were held during that period for the other
part of the manor. In 1805, when the whole manor
was bought from the Crown by George Johnstone
and James Humphreys, the full jurisdiction of its
courts, both leet and baron, was revived. This
aroused opposition from the parish vestry, which
in April 1806 passed a long resolution of protest.
The vestry was especially alarmed by the possible
extension of credit 'calculated to involve and distress
the labouring poor and likely to end in an increase
in the poor-rate'. This presumably means that the
court baron was proposing to revive its jurisdiction
over small debts. The vestry was also annoyed
because the court was claiming, as copyhold, Newman's alms-houses, which the vestry held to be
freehold. (fn. 11) In both these matters the vestry's
opposition seems to have been successful. Court
books for the manor of West Ham survive from
1808 to 1922. (fn. 12) Courts leet were held only until
1819. For Stratford ward they appointed a constable
and two headboroughs, and for each of the other
two wards a constable and one headborough. Various
other officials were appointed for all or part of the
period 1808–17: bailiff, water bailiff, marsh bailiff,
two pinders, a forest reeve. Formal courts baron
continued until 1841, after which the books record
only copyhold conveyances.
In 1587 the homage at the manor court said that a
cage and a pillory should be set up at Stratford
Street. (fn. 13) By 1732 stocks, whipping-post, and pillory
were being maintained by the parish vestry, presumably because the court leet had lapsed. (fn. 14) In 1808–13
the manor court rebuilt two cattle pounds, in Stratford Broadway and in Barking Road, Plaistow.
For West Ham Burnells the earliest surviving
court rolls are for 1603–24 (fn. 15) and for 1627–8 (drafts). (fn. 16)
During that period the court leet was appointing a
constable for Upton ward. From 1649 to 1925 there
is a continuous series of court rolls and books for
this manor, including, for some periods, the associated manors of East Ham Burnells, East West
Ham, and Plaiz. (fn. 17) A court leet was held for West
Ham Burnells in 1681; with this exception the series
records only courts baron.
Surviving parish records (fn. 18) include vestry minutes
from 1646 to 1869, churchwardens' accounts for
1643–1710 (fn. 19) and 1788–1803, and overseers' accounts
for 1749–62 and 1787–1819. Vestry meetings appear
to have been held in the vestry room or, when more
accommodation was needed, (fn. 20) in the church. About
1740 they were often adjourned to public houses.
The number signing the minutes was usually
between 10 and 20, but at important meetings it
sometimes rose to over 100, and there is evidence
that signatures do not always indicate total attendance. Elections, particularly of lecturers, attracted
the largest attendances.
There is no evidence that any vicar attended
vestry meetings until 1672. Before then those who
signed the minutes first, presumably as chairman,
were prominent laymen like (Sir) Robert Smyth
(Bt.) (1649 and later), Sir Jacob Garrard (1663), and
Sir William Humble (1670 and later). In 1663–71
there are occasional references to the steward of the
vestry, probably its convener. Richard Hollingsworth
(vicar 1671–82) and Joshua Stanley (1682–90)
usually attended and sometimes signed first. John
Smith (1690–1708) usually attended and always
signed first. In his absence one of the churchwardens
usually signed first. From that time the vicar seems
always to have taken the chair when present. When
he was away it might be taken by the assistant
curate, a churchwarden, or another vestryman.
From the 1640s the vestry appointed annually a
committee to audit the accounts of the parish
officers. In 1731 that committee was merged with
the workhouse trustees, a body appointed for the
first time in 1729. The joint committee, which
included the vicar, churchwardens, overseers, and
about 20 others, was re-appointed annually until
1819. It was powerful, taking an active part in the
administration of the parish and controlling the
parish officers. From 1769 its orders of poor-relief
were shown as a separate section in the overseers'
accounts. Other committees were sometimes formed
for special purposes like the re-assessment of rates.
In 1819 the parish set up a select vestry. (fn. 21) A committee of by-ways, appointed in 1823 to carry out
an investigation, was made permanent in 1824 and
was re-appointed at least until 1829.
By the early 17th century West Ham was divided
into wards. There were originally four, Stratford,
Plaistow, Church Street, and Upton, but by the
1640s Upton was for most purposes merged with
Church Street and there are no references to it as a
separate ward after 1661. From the 1640s until 1836
Stratford, Plaistow, and Church Street each had
one churchwarden and one overseer. The wardens
were all appointed by the vestry: there is no evidence,
during this period, that any of them was appointed
by the vicar. One of the three was by the 1670s being
designated the 'head' warden, and from 1700 the
'accountant' warden. Each of the three wards had
two surveyors of highways until about 1720, when
the number was reduced to one. From 1820, when
West Ham manor court leet ceased to function,
until 1840, the vestry nominated constables and
headboroughs, for appointment by the magistrates.
A vestry clerk, receiving a small honorarium, was
being employed by 1663, the office remaining in
the same family until 1736. (fn. 22) From 1730 to 1745 or
later there was a parish treasurer, whose office was
revived in 1819–36.
The vestry appointed various paid subordinate
officials. The parish sexton, first mentioned in 1657,
was primarily a church officer, but during the later
17th century appears also to have supervised newcomers to the parish in relation to the settlement
laws. Newcomers subsequently became one of the
responsibilities of the beadles, to whom there are
references from 1701. There were usually two and
sometimes three beadles, who acted as general
assistants to the churchwardens and overseers. The
'upper' beadle was often designated as an 'extraordinary overseer', and between 1754 and 1777 was
also workhouse master. The beadles were well paid
and wore splendid uniforms. Vacancies were keenly
contested. In 1781, for example, there were four
candidates for the post of upper beadle, whose
appointment was decided by a public poll in which
over 200 votes were cast. The successful candidate
served until 1795 and was then granted a retirement
pension. The surveyors of highways were supported
in 1767–84 and 1806–11 by three assistants, one
for each ward. No assistant surveyors are recorded
in the minutes from 1785 to 1805. From 1812 there
was a single assistant surveyor for the whole parish,
but in 1826 James Clarke, who then held the post,
was dismissed for embezzlement, and no successor
was appointed. Among other minor officials were
three engineers (from 1795), who looked after the
parish fire-engines.
The select vestry, formed in 1819, appointed an
assistant overseer at £150 a year with £50 for the use
of a room in his house. From 1827 to 1833 it was
employing a second assistant.
Information concerning rating is incomplete and
sometimes obscure until the later 18th century.
The churchwardens' accounts for 1643–1710 relate
to the parish charities and poor-relief as well as the
church. During the first half of that period income
and expenditure seem to have been carefully recorded, except in 1660, when a churchwarden was
robbed and murdered before his books had been
made up. The accounting system, however, was
crude. Receipts from any source might be used for
any parochial purpose, no proper distinction being
made between income from charities, poor-rates,
and church-rates. In 1674–5, for example, the
church-rates of Plaistow and Church Street wards
were spent entirely on poor-relief. From 1679 there
are usually separate overseers' accounts, one for
each ward, with another account for charities and
the church. But for many years after that there were
cross-payments from one account to another, and as
late as 1737 the vestry found it necessary to order
that in future the church-rate should be made
separate from the poor-rate and that nothing should
be paid for the church out of the poor-rate. The
rateable value of the parish increased from £10,500
in 1742 to £30,600 in 1818, but the poor-rate rose
much more rapidly. (fn. 23) The main reason for the
slower increase in the rateable value was that cottages
occupied by the poor were altogether exempt from
rates, whether payable by owners or by occupiers.
By 1818 there were over 700 such houses in the
parish. In 1804 a committee of the vestry urged that
their owners should be forced to pay rates, if necessary by the promotion of a local Act of Parliament,
but the owners defeated this move by packing the
vestry with their cottage tenants, and it was not
until 1820 that cottages were rated. (fn. 24)
Except for Newman's and Harris's alms-houses (fn. 25)
and possibly one or two poorhouses, (fn. 26) there was no
parish accommodation for the poor until 1725, when
the vestry built a workhouse in Abbey Lane on a
site given by Sir Gregory Page, Bt. (fn. 27) The house was
enlarged in 1760 and on several later occasions,
bringing the total accommodation by 1836 to about
280. In 1786–8 part of it had to be rebuilt after
a fire. Between 1812 and 1818 the annual average
number of inmates rose from 101 to 189. Later
figures show great variation, by year and season, the
highest, 283, being recorded in the winter of 1829–30. The house appears to have been well managed.
Separate sick rooms were built in 1760 and children's
rooms in 1819. Serious efforts were made to set the
poor to work. In 1778 they were being taught to
wind silk, and in 1819 a variety of textile and other
trades was being carried on. In the 1820s and 1830s
sack-making was especially profitable, producing an
income of £500 in a good year. After 1836 the
workhouse was let to various tenants until about
1866, when it was sold, its site being incorporated
into a leathercloth factory. (fn. 28)
Until 1725 poor-relief consisted mainly of pensions or doles. In 1653–4 there were some 40
pensioners and in 1678–9 about 50. In 1686, before
this became a legal requirement, the vestry ordered
parish paupers to wear badges. When the workhouse
was built the vestry decided to stop paying pensions,
but in fact these, along with other forms of outdoor
relief such as rent aid, medical care, boarding out,
gifts of food, fuel, clothing, and the tools of trade,
continued to account for a large proportion of the
poor-rate up to 1836. The apprenticeship of pauper
children was under the direct supervision of the
workhouse and auditors' committee. Between 1755
and 1788 some 44 apprentices were bound, mostly to
weavers, silk-weavers, or peruke-makers in London
and east Middlesex. The vestry seems on the whole
to have treated its poor with humanity. In 1788,
for example, it prosecuted a master for ill-treating a
parish apprentice, and in 1817 it erected a shelter
outside the workhouse for those awaiting relief. In
the early 19th century, when its policy was clearly
influenced by the presence in the parish of prominent Quakers like the Gurneys and Frys, it even
behaved kindly towards those for whom it had no
legal obligation. Thus in 1823 the select vestry
reported that several travellers taken ill in the parish
had recently expressed gratitude for care received
from the parish officers.
A manuscript written about 1740 by an anonymous farmer, and entitled 'Some general observations on … West Ham', (fn. 29) described the parish as
one of the poorest within seven miles of London.
It stated that out of c. 570 houses in West Ham
more than 200 were inhabited by those too poor
to pay rates. It complained bitterly of the burden
of the rates upon the shopkeepers and farmers and
of recent extravagance and mismanagement by the
parish vestry. The writer was probably Thomas
Prat, a local magistrate who between 1735 and 1745
battled against the vestry, in and out of court, to
keep down the rates and to prevent their misapplication. His campaign was apparently sparked
off by the vestry's decision to exempt the vicar from
rates. When it was over the parish received, apparently from quarter sessions, a set of instructions
'whereof for the future they may avoid such differences and inconveniences …'. (fn. 30) This urged more
businesslike methods of parish government, including the careful keeping of accounts and minutes,
greater care in levying rates, and the limitation of
expenditure at vestry meetings adjourned to public
houses.
Prat's reforming campaign was timely. In the
17th century, when West Ham was still small, casual
methods of administration did little harm, but by the
mid-18th century it had a rapidly growing population
including many poor, and greater efficiency was
needed. Prat, who left the parish in 1750, seems to
have achieved his main object. Between 1736 and
1765 the rate poundage remained steady at about
1s. 6d. It then began to rise, but after some higher
fluctuations it was no more than 3s. 1d. in 1795. In
1815 it was 5s. and during the next three years rose
to 8s. This caused the vestry to appoint an investigating committee, whose report was printed early in
1819. The committee stated that the poor rate had
risen from £5,080 in 1811 to £12,110 in 1818. The
increase was due partly to the approach of the
London docks and the other new industries, but
above all to the influx of poor Irish, who worked
elsewhere in the summer, returned to West Ham
for the potato harvest, and remained there, unemployed, throughout the winter. Unlike English
vagrants the Irish were not then normally subject
to the settlement laws, so that it was difficult to
remove them, though the vestry sometimes paid
their fares back to Ireland. That anomaly was dealt
with by an Act of 1819, (fn. 31) and from that year all
Irish who became chargeable were removed from
the parish. By then, however, many of them had
acquired a settlement: in the winter of 1829–30 the
Irish and their descendants formed a quarter of
those applying for relief in West Ham. The report
of 1819 comments on various other aspects of parish
government, including the desirability of rating the
owners of cottages, and the conduct of the workhouse. On its recommendation the vestry appointed
a committee of guardians of the poor, anticipating
the provisions of the Second Sturges Bourne Bill,
then before Parliament. That committee was transformed into a select vestry later in the same year,
when the Bill became law. After 1819 distress
declined and from 1821 to 1836 the poor-rate
poundage was kept down to about 4s. In 1836 the
parish became part of the West Ham poor law
union.
By the end of the 18th century, when the population had risen to over 5,000, the vestry had to deal
with problems of policing as well as poverty. In
1786 it became concerned over 'night invaders', and
ordered its officers to visit eating houses and lodging
houses and arrest all suspicious persons. The parish
then had three watch-houses, one in each ward.
These may all have originated in 1662, when the
vestry was planning them. The Stratford watchhouse was certainly built about 1662. It was rebuilt
in 1750–3, when the turnpike road was widened,
and again in 1781. The Church Street watch-house
was repaired in 1743 and rebuilt in 1778. A new
watch-house, presumably for that ward, was built
beside the workhouse in 1799, when the vestry
resolved to employ an armed watchman to serve
there from Michaelmas to Lady Day. The Plaistow
watch-house was rebuilt in 1775 on a new site. In
the early 19th century official action was reinforced
by a West Ham society for the prosecution of felons. (fn. 32)
In 1840 West Ham became part of the Metropolitan
police district.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT 1836–86. (fn. 33)
West Ham in
1836 was little more than a group of large villages.
During the next fifty years it became an industrial
town with a population of over 150,000, but the
evolution of its local government lagged behind its
physical growth. At the start of that period the only
local authority within the parish was still the open
vestry with its associated select vestry. In 1836 the
open vestry set up a highway board of 10 members,
enlarged to 12 in 1839, and to 20 in 1840, when, in
addition to its responsibility for the roads, the board
was given control of the parish fire-engines. The
members were elected annually in the vestry meeting.
Apart from the matters thus delegated to the highway board, the vestry now had no important civil
powers, since poor-relief had become the responsibility of the guardians.
The vestry was reluctant to accept its diminished
status. It continued to elect the select vestry until
1846, although that body seems to have done little
after 1836. Also in face of opposition from the
guardians it continued to appoint a salaried vestry
clerk until 1845. It then abolished the post, resolving
to appoint instead an additional assistant overseer,
whose duties were to include those of vestry clerk.
This was not merely a change of title. The vestry
was displeased with the former clerk, George Dacre,
who was said to have caused 'litigation and illfeeling' in the parish, and it resolved that the new
assistant overseer should not, like Dacre, be a
lawyer. The new officer was appointed for the first
time in 1847, when Robert Anderson of Rokeby
House, Stratford Broadway, won a contested election. He began to provide parochial offices at
Rokeby House, and the vestry later leased part of the
house for that purpose.
When Dacre was ousted he began to stir up
trouble for the vestry. In 1846 he noticed a technical
illegality in the publication of the rates and successfully appealed against them. In 1853, when the
vestry resolved to provide street lighting for the
parish, he was among those who opposed the scheme
and caused it to be restricted to Plaistow ward. He
then played a prominent part in an attempt to deal
with drainage problems.
By this time the inadequacy of West Ham's local
government was obvious. Uncontrolled development
was creating slums at Canning Town and Stratford.
The population was approaching 20,000, but the
only public drainage was the agricultural system of
open ditches maintained by the Havering and
Dagenham commissioners of sewers in the low-lying
parts of the parish. These ditches were being increasingly fouled by domestic and industrial refuse,
which also polluted the river Lea. The water supply
was poor. Many of the streets were unpaved, unlighted, and unswept. In the seven years 1848–54
epidemic diseases, including cholera, accounted for
more than a third of all deaths in the parish. Firefighting arrangements had become farcical. (fn. 34) The
future development of the town was likely to be
rapid. In recent years a number of offensive trades
had moved into the parish to escape control under
the Metropolitan Building Act, 1844, (fn. 35) and the great
Victoria Dock was nearing completion.
In November 1853 Dacre convened a small meeting of ratepayers to discuss a main drainage scheme
for the parish proposed by the commissioners
of sewers. The scheme was referred to the vestry,
which in the following month resolved to support
it, though some of the members urged further consideration. A Bill empowering the commissioners
to carry out the scheme was enacted in July 1854. (fn. 36)
Though the commissioners have the credit of being
the first body to take action in a serious situation,
their scheme was inadequate. The new sewers
would serve only a small part of the then inhabited
area of the parish. The commissioners had no powers
to extend them beyond the areas described in the
Act, nor to compel persons to drain their premises
into the main sewers. One of the main sewers was
to be an open ditch or 'cut' running alongside the
Victoria Dock to the Thames at Gallions Reach.
This had originally been planned to replace the
old land drains destroyed in making the dock. The
dock company, which had undertaken to provide
the cut, did not consider itself bound to complete
it as far as Gallions Reach until it had cut off the
existing surface outfalls in that direction, and
opposed the use of the cut for house drainage.
The commissioners' Act ignored the other problems of public health, especially the control of new
building. Even before the Act passed the vestry had
realized the weaknesses of the scheme and had also
become alarmed at its probable cost. In May 1854
Samuel Riles, a prominent vestryman and poor-law
guardian, carried a motion condemning the Bill. It
was then too late to stop it, but he continued to
attack the scheme, and organized a petition of ratepayers to the General Board of Health, calling for a
public enquiry into sanitary conditions. The enquiry
was held in 1855 by Alfred Dickens, superintending
inspector of the General Board, and brother of the
novelist. (fn. 37) His report provided ample evidence of
the dangers to public health. He recommended that
the commissioners of sewers should abandon their
main drainage scheme, and that a local board of
health should be formed for the parish.
The West Ham local board was duly constituted
in 1856, with 12 elected members (four for each of
the three ancient wards) and 3 appointed by the
commissioners of sewers. (fn. 38) In 1863 the number of
elected members was increased to 18, the 3 appointed
members continuing as before. (fn. 39) The board's
meetings were held at Rokeby House until 1869,
when a new town hall was opened in Stratford
Broadway. This was designed by Lewis Angell, the
board's surveyor, and John Giles, in an ornate
renaissance style, dominated by a square tower with
domed roof and tall cupola. It was enlarged in 1885.
The board's first chairman was Samuel Riles
(1856–63), followed by John Meeson (1863–75),
cement manufacturer, and George Rivett (1875–86),
builder and undertaker. Meeson, who served on the
board throughout its existence, was always prominent. The original members included five who
had been on the parish highway board in its later
years. Among the members appointed in 1856 by
the commissioners of sewers were the vicar of West
Ham (A. J. Ram), and Capt. R. W. Pelly, R.N., a
fellow of Trinity House whose family owned much
of the parish. Both served until 1869, and had
considerable influence. But with these and two or
three other exceptions the members of the board
seem to have been tradesmen of narrow experience
and outlook. A few were corrupt, as in 1872, when
one was imprisoned and another resigned after the
discovery of election malpractices. Others used their
position as a stepping stone to an office of profit
under the board, as in 1875, when two members
resigned to contest the vacant post of rate-collector,
one of them being successful. No regular groups or
parties can be identified among the members. This
was not a source of strength, for the board's meetings
were sometimes quarrelsome, and its policies often
capricious, irresolute, or short-sighted.
The board appointed a full-time surveyor, and a
part-time clerk (a solicitor), medical officer, and
honorary treasurer (a banker). The first surveyor
was dismissed in 1859 for accepting bribes from
private builders. The second, J. G. B. Marshall
(1859–67), was dismissed after a disagreement about
his terms of employment, in which the board was
at fault, since it kept altering them arbitrarily.
Marshall went into private practice and later became
himself a member of the board. The board's third
and last surveyor was Lewis Angell whose eventual
dismissal, after a dispute with the borough council,
is described below. (fn. 40) The board's first clerk died in
1862; it was found that he had been embezzling
public funds. The third clerk, F. E. Hilleary, appointed in 1874, came from an old-established family
firm of solicitors at Stratford. He served the board
and the borough council with distinction until 1913.
With an impressive mien, and holding many other
part-time posts in the district, he was nicknamed
'the West Ham Pooh-Bah'. (fn. 41) The board was served
in succession by two medical officers. In 1859 the
West Ham Parochial Association suggested that
this post should be abolished as unnecessary. The
board took no action then, but a similar proposal
in 1863 resulted in the reduction of the medical
officer's salary.
The board's treasurer was no more than its bank
manager, acting ex officio. There was no separate
financial department. Responsibility for accounting
was ill-defined but was mainly in the hands of the
clerk. During the lifetime of the board several
frauds were committed by its officers. That of 1862,
by the clerk himself, has already been mentioned.
In 1875 the assistant clerk and one of the ratecollectors were found to have conspired to commit
much more serious fraud. Both fled abroad to escape
prosecution. Another rate-collector, dismissed for
embezzlement in 1884, was later imprisoned. At his
trial the jury, recommending mercy, suggested that
the laxity of the board's accounting methods had
tempted him, and in general it is likely that the
failings of the board's officers were due as much to
the defects in the administrative system as to their
personal weaknesses.
The administration was always under strain. The
staff was very small by modern standards and was
not expanded in proportion to the town's growth.
Between 1856 and 1886 the rateable value increased
from £80,000 to £652,000, but it was not until 1885
that the number of rate-collectors was raised from
three to four. In 1878 the surveyor, asking the board
to augment his staff, stated that it was no larger
than it had been ten years earlier, and that his salary
had also remained the same; during that decade the
population of West Ham had doubled, to about
100,000.
The failure to employ staff in sufficient numbers,
and to pay them adequately, which was not unique
to West Ham, sprang from the board's chronic
financial weakness, which hampered all its activities.
During its early years the board had great difficulty
in raising loans for public works, and it was also
involved in a long and costly lawsuit concerning the
rate assessment of the Victoria Dock Co., one of
the largest ratepayers. Owing to the poverty of the
town the poor-rates, and later also the school-rates,
were very high, and the board, in making its own
precept, always had to beware of pressing the ratepayers too hard.
On taking office the local board was vested with
the powers specified in the Public Health Act, 1848,
under which it had been formed. It immediately
superseded the parish highway board, but had to
wait until the passing of the Local Government Act,
1858, before it could supersede the Plaistow lighting
inspectors or assume responsibility for the parish
fire-engines. Even after 1858 its freedom of action
was limited by the powers of many other public
bodies. The parish was under the jurisdiction of
Essex quarter sessions, the Metropolitan police, and
West Ham poor law union. Elementary education,
from 1871, was provided by West Ham school
board. The Middlesex and Essex highway trust
controlled the main road through Stratford, and the
Commercial Road trust that through Canning Town.
The Havering and Dagenham commissioners of
sewers remained responsible for surface drainage,
and although they did not try to carry out the drainage scheme as provided in their Act of 1854, that
Act remained in force in spite of an attempt in 1863
to revoke it. (fn. 42) The Thames conservancy board and
the river Lee trust (later Lee conservancy board)
controlled the watercourses on the southern and
western boundaries of the parish. The Metropolitan
board of works, formed in 1855, built its great
northern outfall sewer through West Ham, with a
pumping station at Abbey Mills. The City of London, as the Port of London sanitary authority,
created in 1872, was responsible for health and
sanitation in the docks. Gas, water, and transport
were provided by commercial companies, including
the West Ham Gas Co., the East London Waterworks Co., and the Great Eastern Railway Co., all of
which had works in the parish. The local board had
to reckon with several other large firms, notably the
Victoria Dock Co. and the Thames Ironworks Co.,
which were important as ratepayers and employers
of labour, and many smaller ones, especially those
concerned with building development or with
offensive trades. Most of these bodies or groups came
into conflict with the board at some time.
The local board's most urgent problems in 1856
were sewage disposal, street improvement and
maintenance, and control of the town's development.
The board's initial plans for the first were based on
assurances from the Metropolitan board of works
that West Ham would soon be able to make use
of the northern outfall sewer then being planned as
part of the metropolitan main drainage scheme.
The local board failed to insist that these assurances
be given statutory force in the Metropolitan Board
of Works Act, 1858, (fn. 43) and the M.B.W. subsequently
refused to permit access to the northern outfall
sewer. Thus West Ham's temporary sewage system,
completed in 1861 for a population of about 30,000,
had to be expanded during the next forty years to
serve nine times that number. The outfall works
at Bow creek polluted both the Lea and the Thames,
and under Acts of 1868 and 1870 the respective
conservancy boards secured powers to force West
Ham to purify its effluent. (fn. 44) Thus threatened, the
local board unsuccessfully sought an alternative site
for the works, first at Manor Park, and later at
Barking. The second of these attempts failed, in
1872, when the Local Government Board, no doubt
influenced by the protests from Barking, refused
loan sanction. The L.G.B. considered that West
Ham's sewage could be adequately treated at the
existing works, but its opinion did not bind the river
boards, which insisted on a high standard of purification. The refusal of loan sanction wrung from
the local board a bewildered protest: West Ham
had been placed 'in a position of great difficulty
from which it does not see how to extricate itself'. (fn. 45)
After 1872 the local board tried to improve the
works at Bow creek, and experimented with various
methods of treatment, but the river boards remained
dissatisfied. Nor was disposal the only sewage
problem. Dangers to health lay in the foul open
ditches, many of which were still controlled by the
sewer commissioners. In its early years the board
often complained to the commissioners or private
owners about these ditches, usually producing only
counter-protests against the inadequacy of the
board's own scheme. By its local Act of 1867 (fn. 46) the
board obtained certain powers to cause offensive
drains to be cleansed or covered, but these did not
enable it to supersede the sewer commissioners, and
although the board subsequently filled in many of
the open ditches some still remained in 1886.
Other sewage difficulties arose from the fact that
West Ham's rapid growth was totally unplanned.
The board lacked powers to prevent building in
places where no public sewers were available, and
was therefore obliged to permit temporary cesspools
in many cases. Silvertown was a special problem.
That area, which began to develop during the 1850s,
was cut off from the rest of West Ham by the docks.
It was not included in the board's original drainage
scheme, and in 1868 the local factory owners and
estate developers sponsored a private Bill embodying
a scheme for Silvertown and North Woolwich. This
was eventually dropped after the local board had
agreed to extend a main sewer to Silvertown. Further
development, especially the building of the Royal
Albert Dock, soon rendered that sewer inadequate,
and in the 1880s, again under pressure from public
opinion, the board put in hand a scheme for the
whole of that area, with a separate outfall works at
Ham creek. Those works, like the larger ones at
Bow creek, would have been unnecessary if the
board had obtained access to the Metropolitan sewer,
and on one occasion it may have missed a chance
of doing so, at least in part. In 1871 the Metropolitan
board of works invited West Ham to discuss a joint
scheme for North Woolwich, but the local board
refused, saying that its own drainage system was
complete. (fn. 47)
In addition to the problems caused by West Ham's
own sewage were some caused by that of other
parishes. For many years sewage from Leyton
polluted a ditch discharging into the Channelsea
river, in West Ham. That issue, involving several
lawsuits, does not seem to have been settled until
1881. West Ham also suffered annoyance from the
sewage of Wanstead, but this came mainly from
the small detached part of Wanstead near Temple
Mills, and the matter was resolved by a boundary
change. (fn. 48)
Apart from drainage the local board's most urgent
task in 1856 was street improvement and maintenance. The Dickens report had commented that the
number of streets not under the management of the
highway authorities was 'almost peculiar to this
parish'. (fn. 49) Many of these streets, especially at Hallsville and Canning Town, were muddy tracks, deeply
rutted and strewn with rubbish. The initial paving
of private streets was the responsibility of their
owners. This was difficult to enforce, and the board's
powers in the matter were uncertain until the Local
Government Act, 1858, enabled it to improve private
streets, to levy special rates from their owners, and
to raise loans on the security of those rates. For
years the board had to devote much time and effort
to private improvement works, in addition to the
routine maintenance of public roads. When the
highway trusts were wound up the board also became
responsible for the main road through Stratford
(in 1866) and that through Canning Town (in 1871).
In taking over the Stratford road from the Middlesex
and Essex trust the board found itself involved in
complicated negotiations with the owners of the
bridges over the Lea and its branches. (fn. 50) Even more
important was the board's purchase, from the North
Woolwich Land Co., of Victoria Dock Road and
North Woolwich Road, leading to Silvertown and
the docks. These had been laid out by the company
before the board's time, but had been badly maintained and were subject to heavy tolls which caused
great annoyance as Silvertown grew. In 1882 local
industrialists forced a public enquiry, as a result of
which the board secured powers of compulsory
purchase under its Act of 1884 (fn. 51) and took over the
roads in 1886. During the 1880s the board also
obtained statutory powers to buy land for widening
main streets. (fn. 52)
One of the main reasons for the formation of the
board had been the need to control the town's
development. In 1855 West Ham already had considerable slums, including some recently built. In
the Randall Street area of Canning Town 'the
houses … though comparatively new, are all to
pieces … the footings of the foundations for some
of the house walls are actually on the surface'. In
North Woolwich Road cellars were being built in the
excavation of old ditches; yards were constantly
under water in the winter and some even in summer;
many single houses had been divided into two without additional sanitation. (fn. 53) Smallpox had lingered in
that area for more than seven months and there had
also been cholera. These conditions had been made
possible by the absence of building controls in the
parish before 1856. The local board prevented a
repetition of the worst evils of the previous generation, but it cannot be said to have done, or tried
to do, much more. Builders were often able to evade
or defy the by-laws, or to persuade the board to
take a narrow view of its duty. In July 1864, for
example, the board's surveyor refused to certify a
public house already built in Barking Road, because
he was dissatisfied with the drainage. The board,
however, agreed to issue the certificate because the
house was occupied by its owners 'and therefore in
case the drainage be inadequate he will personally
be the sufferer'. In 1865, reversing its own previous
decision, it permitted the construction of cellars in
North Woolwich Road, in spite of flood dangers. In
considering applications to build in the southern
marshes of the parish the board was certainly in a
difficult position. The area was unsuitable for small
houses at high densities, but its proximity to the
docks and factories created a strong demand for
them there. It was unfortunate also that the area
was one of those most affected by West Ham's first
period of rapid growth, about 1877–83, when the
surveyor's department was overwhelmed with work.
In 1870 only 218 plans for new buildings had been
deposited with the board. The annual total rose to
over 1,600 in 1878–9, over 2,000 in 1880–1, and
2,400 in 1881–2, when the board at last began to get
the measure of the problem. In 1882 it obtained
statutory powers to make new building by-laws and
to appoint more building inspectors, whose salaries
were to be met by charging inspection fees to
builders. (fn. 54) Even later, however, there is evidence
that its system of inspection was inadequate.
In controlling industrial development the board
was a little more effective. From its earliest days the
board often took action to check offensive trades,
sometimes compelling them to close down completely, and restricting them, on the whole, to the
western and southern fringes of the district. It was
helped by public opinion, which readily protested
against the dirt and stench from such factories, and
probably also by the fact that many of the factories
were small and easy to coerce. Nuisances introduced
by public bodies were harder to deal with. The
problem of Leyton's sewage has already been mentioned. A more serious threat to public health was
the establishment of two smallpox hospitals on
adjoining sites at Plaistow, by the Poplar board of
works, and West Ham union. (fn. 55)
In view of the local board's uncertain handling
of urgent tasks it is not surprising that it was often
ineffective in dealing with those less pressing. It
never attempted any systematic slum clearance,
though it occasionally took emergency action when
buildings were in danger of collapse, as in 1871,
at Wood's Yard, High Street, Stratford. Wood's
Yard, a court containing ten wooden houses, had
been one of the worst areas described in the Dickens
report of 1855. (fn. 56) The board provided no public
baths, libraries, or parks. It did, indeed, make one
attempt, in 1868–9, to buy Upton Park, but there
was opposition from the West Ham ratepayers'
association, and the scheme was rejected by a public
poll. The board took no further action, and it was
left to voluntary effort, helped by the Corporation
of London, to secure the park for public use. The
board's fire brigade was for many years sadly
inefficient. Refuse collection, performed by contract,
was never satisfactory. Gas street lighting, also by
contract, was apparently adequate, except in private
streets, where the board was hampered by lack of
legal powers.
The board was not responsible for policing or
for water supply, but it exerted some influence on
both. The squalor in which many of West Ham's
inhabitants lived occasionally led to disorder, and
to complaints, in which the board joined, against
the inadequacy of the police. The outbreaks which
attracted most attention were those occurring in
main roads. In 1864 there were allegations of obstruction by crowds of roughs in Barking Road.
There were frequent complaints, as in 1877, of
disorder around the market stalls in Stratford
Broadway. In 1880 there was an outburst of violence
in Romford Road, Forest Gate, where windows
were broken and gate-piers overturned. This was
especially alarming, since it struck at a middle-class
area, and in the following year the board secured
the appointment of a stipendiary magistrate for
West Ham, and planned a new court house, which
was completed in 1885 as part of the town hall
extension.
Problems of water supply are described elsewhere, (fn. 57) but it must be observed here that the local
board's failure to co-operate with the water company
in 1886, though not without reason, delayed the
introduction of a constant supply in West Ham.
West Ham was incorporated as a municipal
borough in 1886. The local board, in a farewell
report, boasted of its thrifty administration. Between
1874 and 1886 the rate poundage had been reduced
steadily, from 4s. 2d. to 2s., and the outstanding loan
debt, amounting in 1886 to only a quarter of the
rateable value, was exceptionally low. Those who
came after saw the matter differently. Will Thorne,
who joined the borough council in 1891 and served
on it for over fifty years, blamed the board for
'calculated neglect and lack of foresight' and especially for failing to buy land for public purposes when
it was relatively cheap. (fn. 58) The burden of this neglect
fell heavily upon the board's successor, the borough
corporation. The borough treasurer, commenting
on this in 1901, noted especially that between 1871
and 1878 the board raised no capital loans at all. (fn. 59)
The local board's neglect also appears in West Ham's
mortality figures. (fn. 60) In 1876 the death-rate was 15.4
per 1,000, compared with 20.9 for the whole of
England and Wales. By 1885 it had risen to 22.0
(England and Wales 19.2).
LOCAL GOVERNMENT 1886–1965. (fn. 61)
The municipal borough of West Ham, formed in 1886, was
divided into four wards, with a council comprising
36 councillors and 12 aldermen. It became a county
borough in 1889 under the Local Government Act,
1888. The number of wards was increased to 12 in
1899, and to 16 in 1922, when the council was also
enlarged to 48 councillors and 16 aldermen. (fn. 62)
The history of local government in the borough
falls into three periods: 1886–1919, 1919–40, and
1940–65. In the first period the town continued
to grow rapidly, reaching a population of about
300,000. Between 1886 and 1904 the borough council
rapidly built up its services, but progress then
became slower, partly because of an economic depression, and partly because the sensational success
of the Socialists and their allies at the municipal
elections of 1898 had provoked a reaction against
their policies. The Labour group lost control in
1900. It did not completely regain it until 1919, but
after that never lost it. During the second period,
after 1919, the council made considerable advances
in slum clearance and municipal housing, built
Silvertown Way, and carried out a major scheme to
widen Stratford High Street and improve the river
Lea. But it was hampered by the poverty of the
town, which made poor-relief a heavy charge on the
rates, and led to a dispute, during the 1920s, between
the West Ham poor law union and the Ministry of
Health. The borough council, though not directly
involved in that dispute, was inevitably affected by
it, since the borough was by far the largest and the
poorest place in the union, and in 1930, when public
assistance was reorganized, took over many of the
union's functions and debts. The third period
started in September 1940 with heavy air attacks.
By those and later bombing over a quarter of the
houses in West Ham were destroyed. This made
possible, after the war, large-scale slum-clearance
and redevelopment, especially in the south of the
borough.
Of the 21 retiring members of the local board 11
were elected to the borough council in 1886 and 2
others later. Seven of those 13 left the council
within six years and only 3 remained after 1898.
From the first the council thus had a very different
membership from the board.
Of the chief officers taken over by the borough
council from the local board in 1886 only the
engineer, Lewis Angell, was serving full-time. His department included his nephew John Morley, and John
Angell, probably his son. When Lewis Angell was
dismissed in 1899, as described below, John Angell
left also, but Morley succeeded his uncle, and served
until 1924. The town clerk, Frederic E. Hilleary,
remained a part-time officer until his retirement in
1913. In his later years there was criticism of his
pluralism, and his successor, H. W. Greaves (1913–15) was appointed on a full-time basis. Greaves was
succeeded by George E. Hilleary (1915–29) son of
Frederic and previously for many years deputy
clerk. The post of medical officer of health was made
full-time in 1898. In 1889 the council appointed for
the first time a borough accountant, heading its financial department, and in 1897 he became borough
treasurer. The first borough electrical engineer was
appointed in 1896 and the first tramways manager in
1903. The first borough librarian (1891–1905) had
no immediate successor, because the council adopted
his suggestion that the post should be abolished on
his retirement in order to save money. The public
libraries, thus decentralized, were indeed then very
short of money owing to the penny rate restriction.
In 1894 West Ham was granted a separate quarter
sessions, with a recorder, Edward Morten (1894–1929).
In most respects the quality of the borough's
staff improved between 1888 and 1919, but there
were a few cases of corruption. In 1899 all the senior
staff of the stables department were forced to resign
after irregularities had been revealed. The case of
the clerk to the education committee (1903) is mentioned elsewhere. (fn. 63) In 1905 the clerk to the borough
justices, also accused of fraud, fled abroad to escape
prosecution.
The borough council soon proved itself far more
vigorous and effective than the local board. (fn. 64) Among
the original councillors were several Progressives,
notably J. H. (later Lord) Bethell, who were soon
joined by others, and by some Socialists, led by
W. J. (Will) Thorne. (fn. 65) The Progressives and
Socialists did not at first dominate the council, but
they had a strong influence on its policies, partly
based on the vigorous support of Mansfield House
university settlement, whose warden, (Sir) Percy
Alden, was a councillor from 1892 to 1901. In 1888
the council secured the transfer to itself of the
remaining jurisdiction, within the borough, of the
commissioners of sewers. (fn. 66) It also obtained powers
to widen several main streets and to issue loan
stock. (fn. 67) A new public hall, opened in 1894, was
built at Canning Town. The West Ham Corporation Act, 1893, provided at last for the town's sewage
to be admitted to the northern outfall sewer. (fn. 68) The
necessary scheme was carried out in 1897–1901.
By 1898 the council had also built two public
libraries and a technical institute, had started building mental and smallpox hospitals, opened two
recreation grounds, put in hand an electricity and
tramway undertaking, and was planning public
baths, council houses, and an isolation hospital. (fn. 69)
In 1897 the Socialists and some of the Progressives on the council formed a Labour group with a
policy including, among other things, trade union
wages for council employees, labour clauses in
council contracts, the provision of council houses,
and the establishment of a works department. At
the election of 1898 this group, with 29 seats, won
control. Their victory, then unique in English local
government, (fn. 70) was attributed to good publicity,
trade union support, and the hostility caused by the
previous council's attitude during a recent dispute
in the engineering industry. The new council proceeded vigorously with the schemes for the baths,
council houses, hospitals, the electricity undertaking,
tramways, and sewage disposal already started or
planned. (fn. 71) Its most controversial measure was to set
up an independent works department, which brought
it into collision with the aged borough engineer,
Lewis Angell, who had held office for 32 years. (fn. 72)
He had already fought one successful battle against
an independent works department. That had been
set up in 1894, but its manager proved ineffective,
and in 1896 Angell forced his resignation and
annexed his department. (fn. 73) In 1899, when the
Labour council decided to re-establish the works
department, Angell bitterly resisted the proposal
and was dismissed. The works department, under
a new manager, was given the task of building,
by direct labour, the new isolation hospital at
Plaistow.
Other controversies in which the council was
involved in 1898–9 concerned the enforcement of
trade union membership among council employees,
labour clauses in council contracts, the Freethinker
magazine, and the parochial charities. The Freethinker had been admitted to the borough library at
Stratford before the Labour group won control of
the council. It was at first kept under the counter
but was later openly displayed. Early in 1899 there
was a storm of protest against it, led by the churches,
in which the 'godless' council was urged to exclude
the magazine from the public libraries. After several
acrimonious debates the Freethinker was relegated
to its previous place under the counter.
The Freethinker issue became the rallying-cry of
those who in 1899 formed the Municipal Alliance
against the Socialists in the borough. (fn. 74) The Alliance
received strong support from the churches, especially
the middle-class free churches. Its leaders included
such prominent nonconformists as Montague
Edwards and Clement Boardman. At the 1899
municipal elections one Alliance candidate published
a message from a Wesleyan superintendent mentioning the Freethinker and urging 'ministers,
Sunday school teachers and parents who are interested in the purity of any young people to vote against
any Socialist'. (fn. 75) This attitude helps to explain the
local Socialists' dislike of the churches, then and
later. (fn. 76) For the churches the Freethinker was only
one of several local issues in which they found themselves opposed by the Socialists. Perhaps the most
substantial was the struggle for control of the
parochial charities, which is described elsewhere. (fn. 77)
The antagonism between the churches and the
Socialists was never absolute, but the Church
Socialist League, which had a branch at Plaistow in
1911–16, found few supporters. (fn. 78) The Municipal
Alliance worked through a number of ratepayers'
associations, each embracing two or three wards.
Some of these associations already existed, notably
the Forest Gate Ratepayers' Association, founded in
1883. (fn. 79) Others were promoted by the Alliance after
1899. At the municipal elections of 1899 the Alliance
won nine out of the twelve wards into which the
borough had for the first time been divided (fn. 80) and
reduced the Labour majority to one. (fn. 81) In 1900 the
Alliance won further seats and gained control of the
council. (fn. 82) It had successfully exploited the fear of
Socialism and the sense of outrage felt by many
at the idea of working-class government. (fn. 83) These
feelings, aroused by the Labour group's brief
triumph, were echoed far beyond West Ham: the
group is said to have been criticized in America,
Australia, France, and Germany. The attacks continued even after the group had lost control. In 1902
The Times, in a series on 'Municipal Socialism' (fn. 84)
published a hostile article on West Ham. This was
answered by J. J. Terrett, a former Socialist councillor, in a pamphlet appraising West Ham's
problems, especially the legacy of neglect left by
the local board. The Times' article had urged that
West Ham should restrict its services and amenities
because it was a working-class town. Terrett showed
that much of the heaviest expenditure had been
necessitated by poverty and disease. In the heat of
this controversy it was not remarked by either side
that the Labour council of 1898–1900 had in fact
initiated very little. All the public works with which
it was particularly associated had been launched or
planned before the 1898 elections. The works department was in another category, but even that had
its precedent in West Ham before 1898. Friendly
critics suggested that the Labour council tried to do
too much, too soon, (fn. 85) but even this mild stricture is
hardly supported by the facts. Between 1895–6 and
1900–1 the council's rates rose by only 8d., of which
3d. was accounted for by new undertakings that
came upon the rates for the first time before
November 1898. (fn. 86)
What is surprising is not that the Labour council
may have tried to do too much but that it did not
try to do more, for action was badly needed, not
only to remedy past neglect, but also to provide
for the future. At that time it seemed possible that
the population of the borough might rise as high
as 430,000. By 1896 about four-fifths of the borough's
area had been built up mainly with small houses at
high densities. The rateable value of these houses
was so low that on one recently-built estate each
house was paying £2 18s. 6d. a year less in rates
than its share of the costs of municipal services,
including education. The borough accountant noted
that 900 a. within the borough were still undeveloped,
and estimated that it would be cheaper for the council
to buy all this land for playgrounds than to have it
covered with similar small houses for which services
would have to be provided. These warnings appear
to have led to some changes in rating assessment,
and probably stimulated the council to extend its
small area of parks and to restrict building. But by
1908 a further 200 a. had been built over. (fn. 87)
The Municipal Alliance retained control until
1910. Between 1901 and 1904 the public works
already started were completed. This left the works
department underemployed, and in 1907 it was again
absorbed by the engineer's department. In 1903 the
council took over from the school board control of
the borough's schools. Between 1901 and 1910 the
only important scheme initiated by the council was
the extension of the municipal tramways. (fn. 88)
In and after 1902 the council provided winter relief
works to help the unemployed, and in 1905 formed
a distress committee, which established a farm
colony at South Ockendon. None of these measures
had much effect on the serious problem of unemployment, owing largely to the high proportion of
casual labourers, especially at the docks. This was
an unhappy period for the Labour councillors,
powerless after their short triumph. In July 1906
one of them, Benjamin Cunningham, seized a vacant
plot of municipal land near St. Mary's Road,
Plaistow, and established there his own farm colony
of unemployed, called Triangle Camp. (fn. 89) The council
brought a legal action for trespass against the 'landgrabbers' and evicted them early in August. In
September Cunningham led another attempt to
occupy the site, but this failed after a brief scuffle
with police and council workmen, and he was subsequently imprisoned for several weeks for contempt
of court. At the municipal elections in November
he stood as an Independent Labour candidate,
disowned by his own party, came bottom of the
poll, and never regained his seat.
In 1910 the Municipal Alliance was defeated by
the Labour group in coalition with a small new party
of Progressives led by J. R. Hurry. (fn. 90) The coalition
was helped to power by an Act passed earlier that
year providing that only councillors should be eligible
to vote for new aldermen. (fn. 91) It retained control until
1912, when the Municipal Alliance came back with
a small majority. (fn. 92) In 1910–12 the Labour group,
no doubt recalling 1899, tended to avoid controversy. (fn. 93)
During the First World War there was an electoral
truce, with the Municipal Alliance controlling the
council by two or three votes. This frustrated the
Labour group's hopes of regaining power, but every
year they made a fierce contest of the mayoral election,
and in 1916 the Alliance at last agreed to the nomination of the first Labour mayor, Richard Mansfield,
an old friend and colleague of Will Thorne. (fn. 94) Thorne
himself was mayor in the following year. By that
time he was the outstanding public figure in the
borough, as an alderman, a trade union leader, and
as the M.P. for South West Ham since 1906.
In 1919 the Labour group at last won absolute
control of the council. It was helped, no doubt, by
middle-class migration from West Ham and by the
prestige of Thorne and other veteran Socialists in
the borough, including J. J. (Jack) Jones, who in
1918 had been elected M.P. for the new Silvertown
division. Between 1919 and 1939 the Labour party
retained and increased their control. By 1938 they
held 54 seats on the council, while the Ratepayers'
Association, successor to the Municipal Alliance,
had only 10 seats and had ceased to contest several
wards. (fn. 95) Such a large majority bred political torpor.
Between 1927 and 1937 the proportion of the electorate voting at municipal elections in West Ham
was in every year smaller than in any of the other
9 great towns of Britain which were the subject
of a special study. (fn. 96) An observer at the last council
meeting before the 1937 elections noticed 'no
enthusiasm, no recriminations, no praise, and no
farewells … harmonious indifference'. (fn. 97)
The Labour council of 1919 was faced with
problems in some ways even more difficult than
those of 20 years earlier. The population was
larger, there was growing overcrowding in the older
parts of the borough, and redevelopment was
urgently needed, both for slum clearance and to
improve main roads. But West Ham was still a
very poor borough, with many unemployed or
underemployed.
In 1919 the relief of poverty was still the responsibility of the West Ham poor law union, which
included the neighbouring districts as well as West
Ham itself. Early in the century the union had been
notorious for extravagance and corruption, which
in 1906–7 led to the imprisonment of five guardians
and four officers. (fn. 98) During the 1920s the guardians
were again accused of extravagance. There was then
no charge of corruption, but the memory of the
events of 1906–7 may have influenced the central
government in its dealings with them.
By 1926 the guardians were deeply in debt owing
to their policy of relieving beyond their resources.
Neville Chamberlain, then Minister of Health,
suspended them from office and replaced them with
a nominated board, under Sir Alfred Woodgate,
which greatly reduced expenditure. In 1929, when
public assistance became the responsibility of county
and county borough councils, Chamberlain proposed to retain the nominated guardians to administer West and East Ham, the rest of the old
union being placed under the county council. (fn. 99)
Soon after this the Conservative government went
out of office, and the plan was dropped. West Ham
borough council took over responsibility for its own
poor, and, by arrangement with the other local
authorities, for administering some of the union's
institutions outside West Ham. It also took over
much of the union's debt, along with the bitterness
aroused by Chamberlain and his ministry. (fn. 100) In and
after 1929 the borough was also affected by industrial
de-rating, as the result of which the council lost
£250,000 of its rate income. This sum was made up
by a block grant from the government, but the grant
was not adjusted to cover either the rise in rates
or the expansion of industry which took place in
West Ham between 1929 and 1939. (fn. 101)
In spite of these and other difficulties the council
achieved a good deal during this period. It erected
some 1,200 dwellings, mainly under slum clearance
schemes, in which its record was second only to
that of Bermondsey among the boroughs in Greater
London. (fn. 102) Two major engineering works were undertaken. Silvertown Way, by a viaduct and bridge,
carried a new arterial road from Canning Town
to the docks over railways and the dock entrance.
In the north of the borough a joint scheme was
carried out for widening High Street from Bow
Bridge to Stratford Broadway, and, with the Lee
conservancy board, for the improvement and flood
relief of the river and its branches. The public health
department was greatly expanded and did pioneer
work in several fields, with such success that from 1923
onwards the borough's death-rate was lower than the
average for England and Wales. (fn. 103) Large indoor baths
were built in Romford Road, open air baths at
Canning Town, and a number of new schools. (fn. 104)
Between 1919 and 1940 there were many changes
among the staff of the council, including some
caused by the retirement of officers who had served
since the borough's early days. In filling senior posts
the council tended to prefer those already on its staff
or having local connexions. G. E. Hilleary was
succeeded as town clerk by C. E. Cranfield (1929–45), previously managing clerk of the firm of
Hilleary's. In 1933 the libraries were again centrallized, under a borough librarian, and in 1939
responsibility for education was transferred from
the town clerk to a separate education officer.
On 7 and 8 September 1940 West Ham was
attacked by German bombers aiming especially at
the docks and the power station. Canning Town
was badly hit, much of the area between North
Woolwich Road and the Thames was destroyed, and
Silvertown was, for a time, encircled by fire. There
were further attacks throughout the following autumn
and winter, the heaviest being in March 1941, and
in 1944–5 the borough suffered severely from flying
bombs and rockets. (fn. 105) The borough council, as the
civil defence authority, had an exceptionally difficult
task. West Ham was one of the most densely
populated towns in Great Britain, and few suffered
bomb-damage so severe in relation to their size. By
1945 over 27 per cent of the houses in the borough
had been destroyed, and in the southern wards the
proportion was much higher, rising to 85 per cent
in Tidal Basin, and 49 per cent in Beckton Road.
During the intensive raids of 1940–1 the local
leadership sometimes faltered, as it did in other
towns under battle stress, (fn. 106) but over the whole war
the council's record was not unimpressive. The
normal municipal services were adjusted to wartime
conditions with little difficulty. The experienced
public health department even acted as a pioneer in
several schemes of national importance. The technical
college continued to function, being for a time the
only one in England still open. The library services
were maintained and even extended. Some of the
council's emergency services, like public shelters and
rest centres, were at first judged to be less efficient, but
others, like the removal and storage of furniture from
bombed houses, were always well-organized. Deaths
from bombing in the borough throughout the war
totalled only 0.4 per cent of the pre-war population. (fn. 107)
Between 1939 and 1945 there was again an electoral truce. After the war the Labour party continued to increase its already large majority at the
expense of the Ratepayers' Association, whose candidates from 1947 were styled Conservatives. (fn. 108)
In 1954 the Conservatives lost their last remaining
seat, and for the next six years the council consisted
entirely of Labour members. In 1960 municipal
politics were enlivened by the Liberals, who won
three seats and began to subject the majority to
searching attack, especially on education. By 1962
they had seven seats, but they lost two of these in
the following year. (fn. 109) By 1945 West Ham had been
greatly altered. Some 14,000 houses had been destroyed by bombing and 500 a. land cleared. The
population, which had already begun to decline
before 1939, was now less than it had been for 60
years. War damage made it possible to undertake
large-scale redevelopment, especially in the south
of the borough, and between 1945 and 1965 the
council built over 9,500 dwellings, of which 8,000
were permanent. (fn. 110) Public buildings completed since
1945 include a new fire station, new municipal
offices in the Grove, Stratford (1960), two libraries,
a health centre, a junior training centre, and a youth
centre, as well as several schools. This programme of
public works raised the council's loan debts from
£4,758,385 in 1945 to £31,515,478 in 1965. Housing
accounted for about two-thirds of the debts outstanding in 1965. (fn. 111)
Under the London Government Act, 1963, West
Ham became part of the London borough of
Newham. (fn. 112)
PUBLIC SERVICES.
The development of gas,
electricity, and water supplies, and of sewage disposal, have been outlined elsewhere. (fn. 113) Gas was
brought to Stratford in the 1820s from the works of
the Whitechapel Gas Co., to light the turnpike road.
In the 1850s, after several changes of ownership,
that undertaking was in the hands of the Commercial Gas Co., which was supplying some western
areas of West Ham parish. The West Ham Gas Co.,
founded in 1846, was incorporated in 1856, when it
took over all the Commercial Gas Co.'s mains in the
parish except those in a small part of Canning Town. (fn. 114)
The directors of the West Ham Gas Co. were local
men, including several, like Capt. R. W. Pelly and
John Meeson, who were also prominent on the local
board, and on one occasion it was alleged that the company and the local board were 'hand in glove'. (fn. 115) The
company was taken over in 1910 by the Gas Light and
Coke Co. (fn. 116) Its works, at Stratford, were still open in
1965. In the south of the parish the North Woolwich
Gas Co. had built works at Silvertown by 1855. (fn. 117) These
were taken over in 1857 by the Victoria Dock Gas Co.,
which opened new works in 1864. The Victoria Dock
Gas Co. was absorbed in 1871 by the Gas Light &
Coke Co., which closed the works in 1909. (fn. 118)
The borough council in 1892 obtained powers to
supply electricity throughout West Ham. (fn. 119) In 1895
it set up a small generator behind the public hall in
Barking Road, Canning Town, which lighted the
hall, the public library, and later also Mansfield
House and a neighbouring shop. (fn. 120) This operated
until 1898, when a power station was completed at
Abbey Mills and a general supply started. The
Abbey Mills station soon became inadequate and
was replaced by a larger one, opened in 1904 at
Canning Town on the site of the former municipal
sewage works. West Ham's municipal tramways
were electrified in the same year. (fn. 121) The new power
station was extended several times between 1904
and 1914 and again in 1922. It was said in 1926 that
West Ham had the largest municipal electricity
undertaking in the London area and the eighth
largest in the country. (fn. 122) In 1930 another generator
was added, and new offices and showrooms were
completed in Romford Road. Demand was stimulated by vigorous publicity, designed especially to
attract new industries to the borough. Between 1930
and 1940 the number of consumers rose from 15,000
to 56,000 and units sold from 98 million to 156
million. During the Second World War the power
station and the offices were heavily bombed. The
electricity undertaking passed in 1947 to the London
electricity board, which in 1951 completed the first
part of West Ham 'B' power station, planned before
nationalization and adjoining the old station, now
designated West Ham 'A'.
West Ham waterworks originated in or about
1745, when Resta Patching of Dorking (Surr.),
mealman, and Thomas Byrd of Queen Street, Westminster, went into partnership for the purpose. (fn. 123)
Byrd, who evidently provided most of the capital,
was to be manager, and Patching the turncock or
overseer. A steam engine was to be erected on land
rented from John Cox of West Ham, from which
water would be pumped to this and neighbouring
parishes. In 1748, shortly after Resta Patching's
death, his son Ezra, with Thomas Byrd and John
Montgomerie, obtained statutory powers to extend
the works and to protect them from malicious
damage. (fn. 124) Among the properties acquired by the
company for its works was Saynes Mill, the lease
of which, from the corporation of London, was
bought before 1762. In 1775, when this lease was
renewed for 61 years, the company stated that it
had spent nearly £70,000 on its undertaking. (fn. 125) In
1807 the West Ham waterworks were taken over
by the London Dock Co., which in 1808 sold them
to the newly-formed East London Waterworks
Co. (fn. 126) West Ham was supplied by the East London
Waterworks Co. until the formation of the Metropolitan water board in 1904. (fn. 127) After 1850, when the
town was growing fast, there were frequent complaints about the inadequacy and impurity of the
company's supply there. (fn. 128) Since West Ham lay
outside the area governed by the Metropolis Water
Acts of 1852 and 1871, (fn. 129) the water company was not
obliged to maintain a constant supply. Nevertheless
the company professed its desire to do so, provided
that certain regulations were met. (fn. 130) Failing that, it
turned on its mains only for short periods each day.
In 1886 it sought statutory power to ensure a
constant supply in West Ham, but this was opposed
by the local board and was not enacted. The board's
ostensible objections were technical and financial,
but behind these lay a quarrel with the company
caused by the recent discovery of eels in the company's mains at West Ham. (fn. 131) With the formation of
the borough council relations improved, and in 1895
the company began to provide a constant supply
throughout West Ham. (fn. 132)
Provision for sewage disposal was the main task
facing the local board when it was formed in 1856. (fn. 133)
The board appointed as consultant (Sir) Robert
Rawlinson, chief engineering inspector to the
General Board of Health. (fn. 134) The Metropolitan board
of works was then planning a drainage scheme for
London, and Rawlinson obtained assurances that
the metropolitan northern outfall sewer, which was
to traverse West Ham, would soon be available for
use by that district. On that assumption the local
board approved his plans for a sewage scheme with
temporary outfall works at Bow creek, and this was
completed in 1861. The metropolitan scheme came
into operation in 1868, but the local board's subsequent attempts to obtain access to the northern
outfall sewer were unsuccessful, and the board was
forced to go on using its Bow creek works, and
eventually also to provide separate works for Silvertown, completed in 1886. In 1893 the borough
council at last obtained statutory powers to use the
northern outfall sewer, but the necessary conversion
works, including a new pumping station in Abbey
Road, near the Metropolitan pumping station, were
not completed until 1901. This long delay, during
the period of West Ham's most rapid growth, created
great difficulties for the local board and the borough
council. (fn. 135)
The pumping station at Abbey Mills, built by the
Metropolitan board of works and opened in 1868,
was designed by Sir Joseph Bazalgette and E.
Cooper, and laid out on a lavish scale, surrounded
by lawns and trees. The main pump-house is cruciform in plan, with domed turrets and a central
cupola 110 ft. high. The building was originally
flanked by two tall chimneys, also surmounted by
cupolas, but these were taken down during the
Second World War to prevent their use as landmarks for enemy aircraft; electric power had been
introduced in 1933. The interior of the pump-house
has elaborate decorative features, including cast
ironwork of Venetian Gothic design. (fn. 136) The West
Ham sewage pumping station (1899) is in a more
restrained classical style. In 1970 it still retained a
beam engine of 1895 and an impressive chimney. (fn. 137)
The local board's unsuccessful attempt in 1868–9
to buy Upton Park (73 a.) for public use, has been
mentioned elsewhere. (fn. 138) In 1872, after the demolition
of Ham House, the project was revived by a private
committee. John Gurney, owner of the park, agreed
to sell it cheap, and funds were raised by subscription. The City of London, which had been one of the
main subscribers, also undertook to maintain the
park in future. West Ham Park, so re-named, was
opened to the public in 1874. (fn. 139) The first municipal
parks (fn. 140) were opened in 1894, at Plaistow (8 a.), and
Beckton Road, Canning Town (22 a.), and in the
same year the borough council took over, as tenant,
the 17 a. of Wanstead Flats lying within West Ham.
Hermit Road park, Canning Town (10 a.), was
bought for the town by J. H. (later Lord) Bethell in
1899, with the aid of private subscriptions. (fn. 141) West
Ham Lane park originated in 1900, when the first
part was bought; it was later enlarged to 10½ a.
Several other parks and playing fields were provided
by the borough council, including the Grove
Gardens, Stratford, laid out in 1901 on a small
piece of roadside waste which the local board had
bought from the lord of the manor in 1884. In 1963
the council owned 97½ a. of public open spaces. (fn. 142)
The earliest public baths in the borough were
privately owned. (fn. 143) In 1886 and for a few years after,
there was a swimming bath in Manbey Park Road,
Stratford, on the site later occupied by Boardman's
furniture depository. (fn. 144) The Carpenters' Company
institute, Jupp Road, Stratford, founded in 1886,
also contained a swimming bath. Municipal swimming baths were opened at Plaistow in 1901 and
at Silvertown in 1922. The Silvertown baths were
badly damaged by bombing during the Second
World War and were finally closed in 1948. The
corporation was planning baths for Stratford as
early as 1895, but this project lapsed, and in 1905,
when the Carpenters' Company's school closed, the
council leased the bath in Jupp Road, retaining it
until 1934, when large municipal baths were built in
Romford Road. In 1937 an open-air bath was built
in Canning Town park, replacing a smaller pool
built by private subscription about 30 years earlier. (fn. 145)
Slipper baths were opened at Fen Street, Tidal
Basin, in 1912, and at Plaistow Road, West Ham,
in 1932. The Fen Street baths were bombed in the
Second World War and were finally closed in 1944.
West Ham already had public fire-engines in
1785, when the parish vestry arranged a new contract for their annual maintenance. (fn. 146) In 1792 the
vestry, which then had two engines, bought a third, (fn. 147)
and from 1795 to 1840 it appointed each year three
'engineers' (engine keepers), one for each ward. (fn. 148)
In 1841 the engines were placed under the parish
highway board. In 1848 it was found that they
could not legally be maintained out of the highwayrates, and the vestry therefore began to charge them
against the church-rates, contracting for their
maintenance with Edward Thorman, engineer of
the West Ham gasworks. (fn. 149) After 1854, when compulsory church-rates ended, (fn. 150) the vestry defaulted
on its payments to Thorman, who impounded the
engines and would not permit their use. In 1856–7
the vestry formed a voluntary fire brigade, by subscription, recovered the engines, repaired them, and
appointed a trained fireman. (fn. 151) This was a temporary
arrangement, pending the Local Government Act,
1858, under which the local board was able to take
over the fire brigade. (fn. 152) The board bought a new
engine, leased a building in West Ham Lane, Stratford, as a fire station, and built another station near
the Abbey Arms at Plaistow. A new station for
Stratford was built in 1869 as part of the town hall
scheme. For many years the brigade was far from
efficient. The firemen, mostly part-timers, were
ill-trained and badly led. In 1877–8 the local board
reorganized the brigade on a more professional basis,
rebuilt the Stratford fire station, built a new station
in Barking Road, Canning Town, to replace the
one at Plaistow, and opened a third station in rented
premises at Forest Gate. By 1902 there were three
main fire stations, at Stratford, Barking Road, and
Silvertown, and three sub-stations, at Forest Gate,
Plaistow, and Custom House. A new station was
built for Silvertown in 1914. (fn. 153) In 1931 a new station
was built in Prince Regent Lane to replace the old
one at Canning Town. The three sub-stations were
subsequently closed. In 1964 a new station was
opened in Romford Road, Stratford, replacing the
one adjoining the town hall. (fn. 154) The first motor fire
appliance was bought in 1909, but it was not until
1923 that the last horse-drawn steam fire-engine
went out of service.
Between 1899 and 1905 the borough council
built 401 municipal dwellings, in Bethell Avenue
(Plaistow), Corporation Street and Eve Road (West
Ham), Wise Road (Stratford), and Invicta and
Rendel Roads (Custom House). (fn. 155) Most of these were
flats in 'double' houses. In building them the council was concerned to raise the standard of workmen's
houses rather than to meet any housing shortage. (fn. 156)
From 1905 to 1908 there were often as many as 40
or 50 council dwellings unoccupied, but after that
vacancies became fewer. Between 1918 and 1939 the
council built a further 1,200 dwellings, mainly under
slum clearance schemes. (fn. 157) A further 600 dwellings,
built by the Ministry of Transport to rehouse those
displaced by the building of Silvertown Way, were
transferred to the council on completion. The heavy
bombing of the Second World War created the need
and the opportunity for large-scale redevelopment,
especially in the south of the borough. Before the
war ended the council had drawn up a preliminary
scheme proposing that the borough should eventually be restricted to a population of about 165,000,
living in 16 'neighbourhood units'. (fn. 158) Under a plan
approved by the government in 1956 the council
designated 21 areas of 'comprehensive development', totalling some 785 a. The first quinquennial
review of the plan increased the total area involved
to 843 a. Land subject to compulsory purchase
orders was also designated, and by 1965 the council
had acquired over 400 a., mainly for housing and
planning. The plan provided for the development
of some 500 a. for housing, the improvement of
market and shopping areas, sites for new schools,
the provision of nearly 200 a. of open spaces, and
the resiting of certain industries. Between 1945 and
1965 the council built over 9,500 dwellings, of which
8,000 were permanent. A further 1,600 were under
construction in 1965. (fn. 159)
During the 19th century West Ham was subject to
serious epidemics. (fn. 160) There were cholera outbreaks
in 1838 (fn. 161) and many later occasions at least up to
1905, one of the most serious being in 1866, when
there were about 300 fatal cases. Typhoid was still
occurring as late as 1901. Most serious of all was
smallpox which caused epidemics in 1867 and
1871–2. In spite of these diseases West Ham's
death-rate was still relatively low in 1876: 15.4 per
thousand compared with the national average of
20.9. But after that the rate rose sharply, reaching
22.0 in 1885 when the national average was 19.2.
One cause of the rise was the opening of three
smallpox hospitals at Plaistow. That source of infection was eliminated in the 1890s, but though the
borough's death-rate declined after 1900, it remained above the national average until 1918. From
1919, in spite of overcrowding and industrial airpollution, West Ham's death rate was below the
national average. Much of the improvement was
due to the borough's comprehensive health services. (fn. 162)
In 1871 the West Ham poor-law union opened
a smallpox hospital in Western Road, Plaistow. (fn. 163)
Another smallpox hospital, opposite the first, was
built in 1877 by the Poplar board of works, in spite
of protests from the local board. During the following years there were frequent smallpox epidemics
near these hospitals, and in 1884 the local board
itself had to open a temporary smallpox hospital,
leasing for the purpose a row of cottages in Pragell
Street, near Western Road. By then it was becoming
clear that these hospitals, in a rapidly growing area,
were a danger. In 1890 the borough council suggested that all three should be closed, that the Union
and Poplar hospitals should be converted into a
municipal hospital for infectious diseases other than
smallpox, and that the council should build a new
smallpox hospital in a more isolated place outside
the borough. This scheme was carried out gradually
over the next twelve years. In the final stage (1899–1902) the sites of the Union and Poplar hospitals
were combined and extended by the closure of the
road between them. Most of the old hospital buildings were demolished and the new Plaistow fever
hospital, with 120 beds, was built there. It was
recognized in 1906 as a teaching hospital, and during
the next 37 years over 3,000 students received fever
training there. It suffered bomb damage during the
Second World War. In 1947 part of it became an
annexe of Queen Mary's hospital for the East End.
Since 1948 it has been known simply as Plaistow
hospital. Associated with Plaistow fever hospital
was a children's hospital at Harold Wood, Hornchurch. This was opened in 1909 as the Grange
convalescent home, with 40 children's beds. In 1930
it was enlarged to 116 beds. By 1935 it was providing
temporary accommodation for chronic adult cases,
to relieve the public assistance home at Leyton. (fn. 164)
West Ham's new smallpox hospital was opened in
1899 at Rookery Farm, Dagenham. Though built
and maintained by the borough council it served all
the places in West Ham union. (fn. 165)
The borough council also built a mental hospital at
Goodmayes, Ilford, in 1901, (fn. 166) and in 1932 opened a
colony for mental defectives at Little Mollands Farm,
South Ockendon. (fn. 167) For the treatment of tuberculosis
the council in 1912 converted the Dagenham smallpox
hospital into a sanatorium. (fn. 168) A children's tuberculosis
sanatorium was opened at Langdon Hills in 1927. (fn. 169)
In 1930 the council became responsible also for the
main institutions of the dissolved West Ham union,
including Whipps Cross hospital and the central
home (later Langthorne hospital), both in Leyton, (fn. 170)
and also Forest Gate hospital.
Forest Gate hospital, Forest Lane, had been an
industrial school from 1854 to 1906, and in 1908
became a branch workhouse of Poplar union. (fn. 171) In
1911 it was bought by West Ham union which
reopened it in 1913 as a workhouse infirmary. By
1930 it had 500 beds for maternity, mental, and
chronic sick cases. An extension with 200 beds was
added in 1931. The hospital suffered bomb damage
in 1940. New maternity wards were built in 1950.
The principal building still retains its mid-Victorian
institutional appearance. It is a brick range, 15 bays
long and three storeys high, with round-headed
windows to the ground floor and the central bay
raised to form a low tower.
Of West Ham's former voluntary hospitals the
oldest is Queen Mary's hospital for the East End,
West Ham Lane. (fn. 172) This originated in 1861 when
William Elliot, a prominent local doctor, opened the
West Ham, Stratford, and South Essex dispensary
in a house in Romford Road lent by Mrs. Mary
Curtis. Mrs. Curtis later gave a site in West Ham
Lane, where a new dispensary was built in 1879. (fn. 173)
In 1890 a 32-bed hospital, mainly for accident cases,
was built beside the dispensary. A new hospital
wing, with 28 beds, was given in 1895 by Passmore
Edwards. The hospital was further extended in
1906–10, on the site previously occupied by West
Ham high school. In 1911 it received a legacy of
£20,000 from Joseph Withers. Queen Mary became
patron in 1916 and the hospital then adopted its
present name. In 1917 it was incorporated by royal
charter, and in the same year Charles Lyle gave it
£10,000, including the freehold of the adjoining
Chant Square. By 1931 after several recent extensions there were 219 beds, but in 1940 the hospital
was partly destroyed by bombing, and reduced, even
after repairs, to 164 beds.
St. Mary's hospital for women and children,
London and Upper Roads, Plaistow, originated in
1886, when the vicar of St. Mary's, Thomas GivenWilson, established a welfare clinic and day nursery. (fn. 174)
In 1889 part of the work was transferred to Howard's
Road, as St. Mary's Nurses. In 1893 a new building
was erected in London Road for the nursery with 6
hospital beds for children. The site was provided
by Given-Wilson and the building by the Revd.
Henry Blisset. In 1896–8 the hospital accommodation
was enlarged to 38 beds. The present name was
adopted in 1905 and in 1911 a new 66-bed hospital
was built. In 1946 a new out-patient building was
completed and the hospital beds were increased to
100.
Plaistow maternity hospital, Howard's Road,
originated in 1889, when Katherine Twining, who
had been working at the clinic in London Road,
moved to Howard's Road and established there
St. Mary's Nurses, to provide a district midwifery
and nursing service. (fn. 175) The nurses' home was
gradually extended, in 1904 a 12-bed maternity
hospital was opened in adjoining houses, and in 1915
Chesterton House was bought for a maternity clinic.
The hospital was rebuilt in 1923 and was further
enlarged, to 60 beds, in 1929. Extensions to the
nurses' home and a lecture hall (1936) helped to
make this an outstanding centre for midwifery
training. The work of the district nursing branch
was taken over in 1940 by the East Ham District
Nursing Association.
The Invalid and Crippled Children's hospital,
Balaam Street, Plaistow, was founded by the London
Medical Mission Association. (fn. 176) The mission hospital
was taken over in 1893 by the Canning Town
Women's Settlement as a hospital for women and
children. In 1895 it was transferred to two houses
in Barking Road, remaining there until 1905, when
a new building was erected in Balaam Street. In 1923
the settlement conveyed it rent-free to the South
West Ham Invalid and Crippled Children's Society,
for use by children only. The hospital was extended in 1932–3. It was closed for most of the
Second World War, but subsequently reopened.
The Albert Dock seamen's hospital, Alnwick
Road, Custom House, was founded in 1890, when
the original buildings were opened in Connaught
Road by the Seamen's Hospital Society, which has
maintained the hospital ever since. (fn. 177) The London
School of Tropical Medicine was founded at this
hospital in 1899 by Sir Patrick Manson, and
remained there until 1924. The old dock-side
buildings suffered from subsidence, and in 1937 a
new hospital was built on the present site with help
from the Port of London authority.
In 1948 all the hospitals in West Ham, except the
seamen's hospital, came under the control of the
West Ham group (No. 9) hospital management
committee of the N.E. Metropolitan regional board.
In the provision of welfare services of all kinds
much pioneer work was done by voluntary bodies,
especially the churches and settlements. These were
followed up and developed by the borough council,
which made prompt use of permissive power given
by statute. (fn. 178) West Ham was one of the first education
authorities to provide school meals (1906) and to
establish a school medical service (1908). By 1918
the council was giving financial aid to seven voluntary maternity and child welfare centres. The first
such municipal clinic was opened at Silvertown in
1920, and by 1936 there were five, of which three
had been built for the purpose in 1930–1. (fn. 179) A new
health centre built in West Ham Lane in 1962
provides many specialist services. In 1932 the council
took over from a voluntary society responsibility for
training the blind, and opened temporary workshops
in West Ham Lane; permanent workshops were
built in 1938. Training centres for the mentally
subnormal were opened at Forest Gate in 1950 and
at Plaistow in 1961. The John F. Kennedy junior
training centre, Pitchford Street, Stratford, for
handicapped children, was built in 1964. In 1965
the council was maintaining nine old people's
hostels, all outside the borough except for Adelaide
House, Meath Road, Stratford, which was built in
1954 with aid from the Lord Mayor's National Air
Raid Distress fund. (fn. 180) There were also two reception
homes for children together with six 'family group'
homes. The council's special schools are described
elsewhere. (fn. 181)
A burial board for West Ham was set up by the
parish vestry in 1854, and in 1857 laid out the West
Ham cemetery at Forest Gate. (fn. 182) In 1901 the board
was dissolved and the cemetery was taken over by
the borough council. (fn. 183) The East London cemetery at
Plaistow was laid out by a private company in 1871. (fn. 184)
The Jews' cemetery at Forest Gate is treated elsewhere. (fn. 185)
The history of the public libraries up to 1955 is
described elsewhere. (fn. 186) It should be added in amendment that the hospital library service inaugurated in
1899 did not last long, and that it was not revived
until about 1945. In 1959 a permanent building was
erected in Woodgrange Road for the Forest Gate
library and in 1961 the Silvertown library was
transferred from the Tate institute to new premises
in Constance Street. The total book stock of West
Ham libraries was 222,000 in 1964.