Poplar Poor Law Guardians' Infirmary and Offices (demolished)
Following the cholera outbreak in 1831–2, the parish
Trustees rented a house on the west side of Upper North
Street, at what became the junction with Thomas (later
Gough) Street, from Thomas Horne for 21 years, to
serve as an isolation hospital.
(ref. 29) This building was later
referred to as 'an old and inferior farm-house'. (ref. 30) It was
supplemented in 1849 by an infirmary, erected facing the
existing building across a courtyard, to the designs of
John Morris of Trinity Terrace, East India Dock Road,
Surveyor to the Board of Guardians. The infirmary was
a two-storey building of five bays, having a symmetrical
front elevation with a projecting central porch. (ref. 31) Both
buildings were demolished in 1894, when they were
replaced by the Poplar Poor Law Union's General Relief
Offices and Dispensary. The new building was designed
by Messrs W. A. Hills & Son of Bow and was a twostorey building of red brick with Portland stone dressings,
having a five-bay front of some pretension, but in a
conservative style, facing Upper North Street (Plate 37c ).
It contained relief offices, consulting rooms, a dispensary
and a large waiting hall on the ground floor, and boardand committee-rooms above. (ref. 32)
SS Mary and Joseph Roman Catholic Church, Canton Street (demolished)
The predecessor of the present church, destroyed by
bombing in the Second World War, was built in 1851–6
to designs by William Wilkinson Wardell (1823–99), the
son of a baker in Poplar and a recent convert to Roman
Catholicism. (ref. 33)
(fn. b)
The history of the church seems to begin with the
school and associated chapel established in Wade Street
in 1816. A chapel building was called 'unfinished' by its
priest in 1819, and in 1835 a new chapel was opened
attached to the school: poor Irish labourers supplied
much of the congregation. About 1840, the priest, Father
Hearsnep, is said to have begun preparations to build a
larger church. The famine in Ireland in 1846–7 may have
increased the number of Irish migrants in Poplar, and in
1850 the preliminaries of building were undertaken. (ref. 34)
Wardell submitted to the Metropolitan Buildings Office
in August 1850 a plan for a church in Canton (then
Gates) Street, showing it virtually as built. (ref. 35) Work was
begun by the builders R. & E. Curtis of Stratford in
the following month, but was suspended, only to be
recommenced by them in May 1851, when Cardinal
Wiseman laid the foundation stone. (ref. 36) But work was again
suspended and was resumed only in December 1855 at
the hands of J. & E. Bird of Hammersmith, builders,
under a contract made with Father Hearsnep in May
1852. (ref. 37) The church was opened by Cardinal Wiseman in
September 1856. (ref. 38) The cost was about £9,000, although
it is not clear whether this included the £1,000 said to
have been paid for the site. Less than half of the debt
had been discharged and it took another 50 years before
it was cleared and the church could be consecrated. (ref. 39)
As befitted a friend of Pugin, Wardell employed here
an English Early Decorated style. The church was built
either of brick or 'hassock' (a soft sandstone) faced
externally with Kentish ragstone. (ref. 40) Measuring 130ft by
80ft and accommodating up to 1,100 worshippers, its
cruciform plan gave a five-bay clerestoried nave and
separately roofed aisles (fig. 72). The south aisle had a
pitched-roof entrance porch at the second bay from the
west end and another lean-to porch adjacent to the
transept. The north aisle had on its north side three
confessionals with priest's room. There were north and
south transepts and a straight-ended chancel consisting
of a choir and deep sanctuary. South of the chancel and
on the same orientation a pair of separately roofed chapels
extended east for half its length and occupied the full
depth of the south transept. They were dedicated to the
Immaculate Conception and the Blessed Sacrament, the
former being built and fitted at Wardell's expense as a
thanks-offering for his and his wife's conversion. (ref. 41) On
the north side of the chancel were an organ chamber and
sacristy, the former partitioned-off by a wooden screen
made by Charles Brown of Hampstead. (ref. 42) At the crossing
a square battlemented tower rose to the moderate height
of 80ft and finished with a pyramidal roof. (ref. 43)
Representations of the church show a sober straightforwardness. Particularly from the south-east (the aspect
from which Wardell, to judge from his own perspective
view, (ref. 44) thought it looked best), the many steep-sided
gable-ends combined harmoniously, and from this viewpoint the roughly equilateral triangle within which the
silhouette fell gave the building an air of stability (Plate
39c). In that respect, although in no other, it had
something of the architectural character of its successor.
A later critic, H. S. Goodhart-Rendel, called it 'excellent,
if uninspired, architecture'. Perhaps it was the lack of
complexity that led him to add that its 'fault' was that it
'somehow or other looked like a small design made
large'. (ref. 45)
In 1926 Alexander Rottmann commented that the
comparatively low tower, akin to a lantern, made SS
Mary and Joseph look like the church of a priory rather
than of a parish. (ref. 46) Wardell's plans and perspective show
a cloister extending eastward from the north side of the
church and a few feet of it were actually built, but this
had been intended merely as a covered way from a
presbytery. (ref. 47)

Figure 72:
SS Mary and Joseph Roman Catholic Church, Canton
Street, plan. William Wilkinson Wardell, architect, 1851–6.
Demolished
Inside, the roofs were of timber, with scissor-braces
and tie-beams in the nave and pointed wagon-arches in
the chancel. (ref. 48) In the nave low octagonal columns (if
Wardell's intentions were carried out, of Portland stone)
with moulded caps supported a simply moulded arcade,
but at the crossing tall shafted piers supported high arches
of Caen stone (Plate 39d). The walls were plastered. (ref. 49) The
tower or lantern was open internally to the flat panelled
ceiling at the base of the vestigial spire, with what must
have been a good effect. (ref. 50)
Wardell designed stained glass for windows, including
those of the chapels of the Immaculate Conception and
the Blessed Sacrament. (ref. 51) The two in the chancel and the
chapel of the Immaculate Conception were said at the
opening to contain 'admirable' stained glass by John
Hardman – whether only as executant for Wardell is not
known. The chapel of the Immaculate Conception had a
richly sculptured Caen-stone altar and reredos, also
designed by Wardell. (ref. 52) Seating was provided by chairs.
(fn. c)
In 1905 a vestry and mission room were added, and
in 1932 a new priest's sacristy. (ref. 54)
An admired pulpit of white Carrara marble and coloured stones was installed in 1914, designed by Alberti of
Manchester (presumably Alberti & Lupton, monumental
masons) but carved in Italy. (ref. 55) In 1915 a stained-glass
window, designed by J. Dudley Forsyth and made by
Joseph Chate & Sons of Limehouse, was placed in the
baptistery in the south aisle. (ref. 56)
(fn. d)
By 1926 Rottmann recorded the presence of a roodscreen, although Wardell's drawings do not include one.
(Bumpus noted the dislike of them felt by many Roman
Catholics of Wardell's generation.) (ref. 58) The original High
Altar had been moved to a side wall and replaced. St
Joseph's chapel (of uncertain location) had by then an
altar in the Italian Renaissance style from the 'old'
Brompton Oratory – presumably from the Oratorians'
first chapel in King William Street, Strand. (ref. 59)
A plain brick presbytery under a hipped roof was built
in 1878 east of the church by John Bird of Hammersmith: (ref. 60) the architect is not known. Additions were
made in 1887 and 1908, and a rural-style porch was
added in 1911. (ref. 61)
Bombing destroyed the presbytery and the western
half of the church in 1940. (ref. 62) Their replacement is part
of the story of Lansbury (see page 236).
St Saviour's Church, Northumbria
Street
This church was built in 1872–4 to designs by the
architects F. & H. Francis. In the 1990s it is a conspicuous
object with its surrounding cluster of new houses seen
across Bartlett Park, but originally it was rivalled by the
big and ambitious school buildings immediately westward, which were erected as part of the same project and
were the first to be built by some nine years.
The site was part of Richard Redfearn Goodlad's
estate. A local committee guided by the Reverend T. W.
Nowell, the energetic rector of All Saints', the motherparish, and aided by the Wigram family, took the church
project in hand, and in 1863 A. A. Walter, having failed
to build the four houses which he had intended for the
site, surrendered his building lease to Goodlad, who then
sold the land to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. Slightly
augmented eastward in the following year, the half-acre
cost in all £1,208 6s 8d.
(ref. 63)
The school was built first (see below). Meanwhile a
mission church, of uncertain location, was set up and in
1870–1 was established enough to have an organ. (ref. 64)
Plans for the present church, to designs by the Francis
brothers, were made in 1868. (ref. 65) Construction, by Wicks,
Bangs & Company of Limehouse, did not begin until
1872. The builders had tendered at £5,795. (ref. 66) The church
was consecrated in October 1874, having cost about
£7,000. (ref. 67)
The plan was quite different from (and less interesting
than) that shown on the conveyance to the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners in 1864, when the brothers Francis
intended a church with a nave and single very wide aisle
on the north side, a tower at the north-east corner and
an apsidal east end giving a wide rather than deep
chancel. (ref. 68) As executed the plan conforms to that of 1868
except for the fenestration of the vestry-complex and
chapel north and south of the chancel.
The church is conventionally planned to hold 750
worshippers (fig. 73). The arrangement provides a clerestoried nave with lean-to north and south aisles and a
structurally distinct chancel with a separately roofed
chapel on its south side and two laterally gabled vestries
on its north: the organ loft was originally in the vestry
area north of the chancel. (ref. 69) A lean-to narthex gives access
to the three doors at the west end. The style was called
'Early Middle Pointed' (ref. 70) — in fact it is transitional between
Early English and Decorated, executed in yellow stock
bricks banded with red and laid in Flemish bond, the
openings being dressed with stone and the roofs slated.
The moderate pitch of the lean-to roofs on the north,
south and west sides composes well with the steeper
pitch of the main roofs, where a stone bellcote under a
stone spirelet perches at the extreme east end of the
nave's roof-ridge (Plate 39a).
Inside, the brick is exposed, the banded patterning
being pronounced, particularly where it extends across
the soffits of the arches. The nave arcade is carried on
rounded piers with simply moulded caps and bases
(Plate 39b). Above the arcade ten quatrefoil clerestory
windows, two to each bay, are placed in arched openings
rising from a stringcourse. The timber roof of the nave
has curved trusses rising from stone corbels placed
between the clerestory windows at each bay division
and intermediate scissor-braces rise from an upper
stringcourse above the clerestory. The roof, like that of
the chancel, is of Memel fir. (ref. 71)

Figure 73:
St Saviour's Church, Northumbria Street, plan c1964.F. & H. Francis, architects, 1872–4
The eastern bay of the nave is now elevated a step
above the main level, the chancel two steps higher, the
sanctuary a step higher than the chancel and the High
Altar three steps above the sanctuary. Originally a dwarf
wall of stone separated the chancel from the nave. (ref. 72)
At the junction of the stone extradoses of the arches
in the nave and chancel, and on the capitals and corbels
in the chancel, can be seen detailed naturalistic stonecarving by 'Robinson' - perhaps the stonemason Joseph
Robinson. (ref. 73) It is similar to what was in the Francises' St
Stephen's, East India Dock Road, and therefore presumably represents their taste. The combination of this
stonecarving and the polychromatic brickwork makes
the chancel reminiscent of Street's St James-the-Less,
Westminster, of 1860–1.
The square font and the stone and marble pulpit,
neither now in place, were by F. G. Anstey, stonecarver,
of Anstey Road (now Close), Regent's Park. (ref. 74) According
to Basil Clarke the stained glass in the east window is by
Heaton, Butler & Bayne and that at the west end of the
north aisle (now boarded against vandalism) by S. T.
Clare. (ref. 75) The organ, now removed, was by Forster &
Andrews of Hull. (ref. 76)
When the church of St Saviour's was assigned its
district in 1875, Nowell, as Rector of Poplar, regretted it
did not include the small part of the mother-parish north
of Limehouse Cut, wholly occupied though that part was
by industrial buildings. He wished the vicar of the new
parish to be able to claim monetary contributions to his
district from the owners of factories and workshops 'as
return for the ill savour which their chemical compounds
often cast over it'. (ref. 77) The poverty and deprivation of the
parish continued to be proclaimed by socially aware
incumbents such as Father Robert Dolling (1851–1902,
vicar 1898–1902).
It was doubtless in 1904, to designs by W. Campbell
Jones, that the sequence of seven steps ascending from
nave to altar and the choir-stalls in the eastern bay of
the nave were introduced, at the same time as the organ
was removed to the eastern bay of the north aisle. (ref. 78) The
years between 1910 and 1919 saw a 'steady advance' in
the church services ('the Sarum use was dropped for the
normal Western use'), and side altars dedicated to 'Our
Lady and St. Joseph' were added. (ref. 79) By 1928 worshippers
enjoyed 'full Catholic Teaching and Ceremonial'. (ref. 80)
The church suffered some damage during the Second
World War, when the adjoining school was made derelict.
The depopulation of the district led to the closure of the
church in 1975 and in 1976, when the building was
thought to be suffering from rising damp, the church
was declared redundant. In 1980 permission was given
for its use for 'storage', but in 1984 an Order in Council
authorized the Nigerian Celestial Church of Christ to
use the building. (ref. 81) Removeable divisions have been made
in the aisles to facilitate the social work of the church.
Some damage has been caused by vandals, including the
defacing of the sacred figure-reliefs in the reredos over
the altar in the south chapel. (ref. 82)
The former vicarage abutting on Arcadia Street northeast of the church, recently converted into flats, was
erected in 1877–8 to designs by the architects of the
church, F. & H. Francis, and built by William Bangs,
whose firm built the church, on his tender of £2,290. (ref. 83)
The church hall east of the vicarage was designed by
Seely & Paget, architects, in 1959. (ref. 84)
St Saviour's School (demolished).
Begun in 1864 and
finished by or before 1867, this large school building was
designed by its architects, F. & H. Francis, to look
impressive from the three streets - Arcadia, Northumberland and Hill Place Streets – to which it presented brick-and-stone elevations in a picturesque Gothic
style (Plate 151b). To Arcadia Street it even rose to a steeple.
The builder was William Howard of Covent Garden, at a
tendered price of £3,687. (ref. 85) It was an ambitious undertaking, intended from the first for 900 or 1,000 children,
and supported by subscriptions – amounting to £1,480 –
from nearly 200 local individuals and firms under the
leadership of the Rector of Poplar, the Reverend T. W.
Nowell. (ref. 86) (fn. e) The plan was quadrangular, around a small
central yard (or infants' playground), accommodating the
boys and infants on the ground floor, and the girls on
the first floor, together with two residences (each of four
rooms plus domestic offices) for the master and mistress
(fig. 74). (ref. 87) By the 1920s the lack of an assembly hall was
being noticed and also the lack of separate access to the
intercommunicating classrooms, the latter being supplied
in 1925 by the provision of an external corridor. (ref. 88)

Figure 74:
St Saviour's School, Northumberland (nowNorthumbria) Street, ground-floor plan. F. & H. Francis,architects, 1864–7. Demolished
The school found much favour with Inspectors of
Schools in the first 40 years of the twentieth century, the
work of successive vicars in arranging holidays for the
children being particularly admired. (ref. 89) It was rendered
derelict by bombing in the Second World War and
demolished in or after 1953. (ref. 90)
Mayflower Primary School, Upper North Street
The school, at the southern end of Upper North Street,
has its origins in the Trinity Chapel Day Schools, established in 1843 under George Green's patronage. (ref. 91) Green
instructed his executors to enlarge the school rooms 'in
case it should be necessary' and in 1857 the tender of
Hack & Son to erect new buildings for £1,263 was
accepted. These provided 591 places in two separate but
adjacent buildings on the east side of Upper North
Street. (ref. 92)
On its transfer to the School Board for London in
1872, its name was changed to the 'Upper North Street
Board Schools'. In 1881–2 the Board replaced the buildings with a single block for 800 pupils on the same site,
erected by Charles Cox of Commercial Road on his
tender of £7,276. (ref. 93) This building was badly damaged by
bombing in 1917, when 18 children were killed. A
memorial in Poplar Recreation Ground was unveiled in
1919 (see page 160). (ref. 94)
Owing to the constricted nature of the existing site, in
1926 the LCC's Education Department acquired South
East Row, a group of 16 cottages a little to the north
built by John Stock c1838. (ref. 95) A three-storey school was
erected there by F. R. Hipperson at an estimated cost of
£26,631, with the site of the former building converted
into a playground. The new school opened in 1928,
providing places for 632 pupils. (ref. 96) In 1951–2 the school
became the Mayflower Primary School.
The George Green Almshouses, Nos 14–26 (even) Upper North Street
The almshouses stand on a site acquired by George
Green in 1841–2. He purchased several plots of land,
with six cottages fronting Upper North Street. (ref. 97) The
cottages were replaced by the existing terrace of seven
houses, which was under construction in 1849. (ref. 98) Although
the houses were intended by Green as almshouses, he
had not provided an endowment before his death in 1849.
In the codicil to his will, made a few months before his
death, he directed his executors to make provision for
the almshouses from Trinity Terrace on East India Dock
Road. (ref. 99) Green also instructed that his name should not
be shown on the buildings as their founder.

Figure 75:
The George Green Almshouses, Nos 14–26 (even) Upper North Street, built c 1849. Front (west) elevation and ground-floor plans in 1989
The almshouses, which are of stock brick, were
arranged as seven separate three-storey houses with one
two-roomed dwelling on each floor (fig. 75). The equal
ceiling heights given to the dwellings on each floor explain
the equal heights of the windows in each storey (Plate
37b).
The almshouses were provided rent-free for poor
women, who were generally elderly widows. Occupants
for the 21 dwellings were nominated by four churches,
the terrace being divided into three Congregational
houses, two Anglican, one Wesleyan, and one Baptist. (ref. 100)
The houses were repaired in 1977, by which date their
management was vested in the Springboard Housing
Association, and the residents' qualification had been
modified to include 'poor women who … are inhabitants
of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets'. (ref. 101)