PREFACE
During the last few years London has entered as important a period of rebuilding
as any since that which followed the Great Fire. Many of the buildings recently
erected have filled in the gaps caused by bombing during the war, but others have
replaced older buildings which had outlived their useful span of life. Georgian houses in
St. James's Square, Grosvenor Square and Henrietta Place, which have been demolished
recently, are cases in point.
The Architectural and Historical Buildings Sub-Committee of the Town Planning
Committee, to which the management of the Survey of London has been entrusted, has taken
steps to record these and many other buildings before their demolition. The Committee
has also decided that the Survey should concentrate its attention upon those central areas
of London—Westminster, St. Marylebone, Holborn and part of Stepney—which contain
a large proportion of London's finest surviving buildings. The present volume represents
the first published result of this decision.
Spitalfields is widely known as a former centre of the silk-weaving industry, but its long
and varied history is much less familiar. Widespread building development began in the
second half of the seventeenth century, the period when weavers first began to settle in the
district in any numbers, and until some fifty years ago much of the domestic architecture
of Spitalfields still reflected the prosperity which the silk weavers had formerly enjoyed.
The expansion of Spitalfields Market in the 1920's and 30's and the rebuilding which constantly goes on in the central districts of London have swept away much of Georgian Spitalfields, but a photographic record of Spital Square was made by the Council as long ago as
1908–9, and many of the photographs taken then are reproduced in this volume.
Spitalfields possesses one of the finest churches designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor for
the Commissioners for Building Fifty New Churches. Study of the recently discovered
records of the Commissioners at Lambeth Palace, and of a number of hitherto unnoticed
drawings at the British Museum, has enabled Mr. P. A. Bezodis and Mr. Walter Ison, the
joint authors of this volume, to produce a much more detailed account of the history of the
church than has been possible hitherto.
The Council is most grateful to all those persons who have assisted members of the
Council's staff in the preparation of this volume. The Rev. B. W. M. Berdoe granted
every facility for the study and recording of the great church of which he is Rector. The
Rev. C. E. Surman supplied valuable information relating to the complicated history of
Nonconformity in the area; Mr. G. H. H. Wheler lent private papers which clarified the
early development of his family's estate in Spitalfields, and Mr. Hugh Crallan lent photo
graphs and deeds and allowed drawings to be made of No. 14 Fournier Street. Mr.
S. Moss of No. 56 Artillery Lane and Messrs. Truman, Hanbury, Buxton and Co. Ltd.,
provided access to both their archives and their property. To the custodians of records
housed at Lambeth Palace Library, the Bishopsgate Institute, Stepney Central Library, the Guildhall Library, the Corporation of London Records Office and the Corporation of
London Comptroller's Department, the Council also tenders its grateful acknowledgment.
To all those other persons, too numerous to mention individually, who have placed their
time, their papers or their property at the disposal of the Survey, the Council expresses the
hope that they will feel that their kindness has been justified by the publication of this
volume.
The thanks of the Council are again due to Mr. J. H. MacDonnell, Mr. Ian L. Phillips,
Mr. T. F. Reddaway, M.A., F.S.A., and Mr. John Summerson, C.B.E., F.B.A., who as
co-opted members have provided the Architectural and Historical Buildings Sub-Committee
with their expert knowledge.
The historical portions of the text of this volume, and the research upon which they are
based, are the work of Mr. P. A. Bezodis, Senior Historical Research Assistant in the
Clerk's Department, who has been assisted by Mrs. Marion A. V. Ball. The architectural
descriptions have been written by Mr. Walter Ison, the Architectural Editor of the Survey,
assisted by Mr. A. H. Grogan, both of the Architect's Department. Mr. Ison has also
supervised the preparation of the drawings and photographs, many of the latter being the
work of the Council's Photographic Unit. Mrs. Marie P. G. Draper and Miss P. M.
Calland assisted in seeing the volume through the press.
| County Hall | Richard Edmonds |
| London | Chairman of the Town Planning Committee. |