CHAPTER 8
THE RIVER FRONTAGE BETWEEN WATERLOO AND WESTMINSTER BRIDGES
Narrow Wall (later renamed Belvedere Road), like its continuations
Upper Ground and Bankside in Southwark, was by the Tudor period a road
on the line of the old earth embankment of the river. Norden's map of
Westminster, circa 1593, shows a wide border of marshy ground between
Narrow Wall and the water on the sharp bend of the river between Stangate
and Paris Garden, indicating that a considerable amount of silting up had
occurred there during the mediaeval period.
By the 16th century this foreshore was overgrown with rushes and
willows but it was still subject to frequent submersions at high tide. No
buildings were erected there, though some attempt had been made to drain
it through a number of ditches to the river, and it had sufficient value to be
claimed as “property.” Most of it was considered to be “waste” of the
manor of Lambeth and therefore belonged to the Archbishop of Canterbury,
but by 1504 one portion of it near Stangate just over an acre in extent had
been given to Lambeth Church and was known as the Church Osiers or
Church Hope or Hoopys, (ref. 100) “hope” meaning a piece of enclosed ground in
the midst of fens or marshes or waste ground. In the late 17th century the
name was altered to Pedlar's Acre (ref. 82) (for a discussion of the traditional origin
of this name see p. 62). Another 7 acres further north, known as the Hopes,
had also been alienated at an early date, and after passing through the same
hands as the 3 acres of Cuper's Gardens on the site of Waterloo Road (see
p. 25) was bequeathed in 1685 by Sir Leoline Jenkins to Jesus College,
Oxford. (ref. 102) The ground between Stangate and Pedlar's Acre was sold to the
Trustees for Westminster Bridge; that between Pedlar's Acre and the Hopes
(known as Bishop's Acre and the Four Acres) and between the Hopes and
Cuper's Bridge (part of Float Mead) was leased early in the 18th century to
Sir William East. It was then described as a wall and bank leading from
Stangate to the bank and wall called Prince's Wall with all the messuages on
or near the wall in use as timber yards, wharves, etc., and sublet to a number
of tenants—Thomas Jones, Mary and Edmund Birkhead, Edmund Lee,
Sir John Shorter, Bernard Whalley, Thomas Lightfoot, and William Hillyard. (ref. 77)
Some of these are named on Morden and Lea's map printed in 1682,
which also shows very clearly that while the river frontage was in use the
hinterland remained open marsh and pasture ground intersected with many
drainage ditches.
From 1760 onward, Thomas James, lessee of the Feathers Tavern
near Cuper's Bridge, and others, were making application to the Sewer
Commissioners for permission to “arch over” or pipe the sewers or ditches
by their houses on Narrow Wall (ref. 103) and a number of industrial projects were
started there, some of which are described in more detail below, but there
was little change in the general appearance of the area until after the formation
of Waterloo Bridge approach in 1813–16 and the widening and straightening
of Narrow Wall to form Belvedere Road between 1824 and 1829.
During the excavations for the Festival buildings and for the new
river wall a watch has been kept on the ground for finds of archaeological
interest, and from these and from record sources the detailed story of the
development of this riverside strip of ground, which is set out in the following
chapters, has been build up.