Hanbury Street West of Brick Lane
The line of this street was in existence by the
mid-seventeenth century, before the chief period
of building development in Spitalfields. In March
1648/9 it was described as ’newly named or
known by the name of Lolsworth Lane or Street’,
the name that was intermittently used during
most of the seventeenth century, and derived from
Lolesworth field or Spittlehope, in which it was
situated. In 1649 and later one of the more
prominent tenants of the Wheler family in the
Lane must have been William Browne, who held,
in succession to Jeffery Browne, three houses, a
yard, two sheds, a cowhouse and a garden and orchard, at the western end of the Lane, probably
on its south side: he also occupied, probably for
pasturage, ’all that open field called Spitalfields’,
later the site of the market. (fn. a) In all, he paid £22
per annum rent. (ref. 111)
In March 1662/3 Sir William Wheler of
Westminster granted a ninety-nine-year lease of
this ground or part of it, known as the Cow Yard
(described, perhaps incorrectly, as being on the
north side of the Lane), to William Browne, who
assigned it in 1667 to a William Hutchins who
built houses on the ground, and granted leases of
several other parts of ’the said Ground to several
Persons to build upon reserving Ground rents for
the same’. (ref. 112) In 1671 Hutchins's widow granted
an eighty-year lease of part of the ground to
Thomas Brockwell, a carpenter, who built six
houses on it. (ref. 113)
In Ogilby and Morgan's map of 1677 the
street is called Brown's Lane, the name retained
until 1876 and which was probably derived from
Jeffery and William Browne's holding. In the
same year the Spitalfields surveyor of the highways
was paid ’upon the Account of Repayreing Loles
worth Street which formerly was not customary to
be Repayred’. (ref. 114) In Ogilby and Morgan's map of
1681–2 the north side is shown entirely built-up
but the southern side partly occupied by the unbuilt northern boundary of Joyce's Garden. In
May 1702 the unbuilt parts of the south side of
the street were occupied by a mud wall and a brick
wall. (ref. 10) A comparison of Gascoine's map of 1703
with the map of 1681–2 suggests that there had
been no increase of building on the south side
between the dates of the two.
In March 1712/13, six houses at the west end
of the south side of the street, the two easternmost
being probably now represented by Nos. 12 and
14, together with a yard, which still survives
between Nos. 10 and 12, and ’a small parcel of
ground heretofore a Bowling Alley’ behind the
houses, were conveyed by Frances Paltock, one of
the seven daughters of William Wheler, and
others, in trust for Edward Peck, dyer, together
with four houses on the east side of Red Lion
Street. One of these latter houses was occupied by
Edward Peck, who was one of the’ Fifty Churches’
Commissioners and whose monument stands in
Christ Church. (ref. 115) In 1833 the yard between
Nos. 10 and 12 was called Peck's yard. (ref. 116) The
premises adjoining the east side of Peck's property,
on the south-west corner of Hanbury Street and
Wilkes Street, were also occupied by a dyer (see
below).
No. 8/10 (formerly No. 4 Brown's Lane) was
occupied in 1799 and 1818 by William Hall, a
silk manufacturer. (ref. 117) This was perhaps the Mr.
Hall, a silk manufacturer of Spitalfields, with whom
Henry William Pickersgill, R.A. (1782–1875),
lived and whose business he entered in about 1798
before devoting himself to painting. (fn. b)
Nos. 18–22 (even) Hanbury Street
Formerly No. 10 Wood Street and No. 8 Brown's Lane
Rebuilt
These houses, originally two, were built, together with Nos. 14 and 16 Wilkes Street, by
James Pitman, citizen and carpenter of London,
under a building lease granted by Wood and
Michell in March 1723/4. (ref. 118) In September
1725 Pitman assigned the lease and houses to a
mercer for £1,54O. (ref. 119) The houses have been
rebuilt and are of no interest.
Christ Church Parish Hall
Formerly French Church, German Church, Baptist
Chapel and Methodist Chapel
This building was originally built, as a French
church, probably in about 1719. Samuel Worrall, who was later employed on carpenter's work
in Christ Church, was probably associated with its
erection. It was in existence in December 1719. (ref. 120)
In December 1721 Wood, Michell and Worrall
leased the site and chapel to Joseph Saubere (a silk
dresser) and others, for fifty-nine years, a new
lease for forty-one years being granted in 1739. (ref. 121)
It was a brick-built, stone-fronted building (ref. 122)
standing back behind a paved tree-planted court
yard (see below).
The first congregation seems previously to have
worshipped in the Spitalfields market-house.
Originally non-conforming, they adopted the
French version of the Anglican form of worship
in 1723: by 1740 they appear to have disbanded. (ref. 123)
The building was taken over in 1740 by La
Patente Church, which had been accommodated
in Crispin Street (see page 138)., (fn. c) and which purchased the lease of the Brown's Lane chapel for
£315. (ref. 125) In 1742 the church was joined by that
from Three Crown Court, Wheler Street. By
the 1760's the congregation was large and prosperous. (ref. 126) This French congregation left in 1786
and, with l'Eglise de l'Artillerie, joined the
Threadneedle Street Church. (ref. 127) The building
was then leased, in March 1787, by the French
congregation to a congregation of German
Lutherans under the Rev. Christopher Triebner
(or Truebner). (ref. 128)
An inventory of 1787 (ref. 128) preserves many details
of the chapel as it then was. The building was set
back from the street behind a paved yard enclosed
by a brick wall with doors and palisades and containing a pump and a ’Lofty Tree’. There were
three entrances to the chapel, two on the north
side and one on the west, each with its own lobby,
and two rows of windows at ground and gallery
level except on the south side, which was pierced
by ’two large circle top windows with head lights
and iron casement to each…’ Galleries supported on ’turned columns’ occupied three sides,
and the walls on both ground and gallery floors
had high wainscot dadoes. Over the ’Altar piece’
at the south end were the royal arms ’neatly
carved gilt and painted in a complete manner’.
The ’strong Wainscot Top Communion Table
with a Drawer underneath’ was enclosed by a
railing of turned balusters, and the pulpit and
desk were painted in imitation of mahogany and
upholstered in green cloth. The windows were
curtained and the church was artificially lit by
upright iron candlesticks screwed to the pews,
brass sconces fixed to the gallery columns and by
’four eight light Brass Branches as fixt with Iron
Work Twisted’.’A Eight day Spring Dial in a
Mahogany Case … made by Penton of Moorfields’ was attached to the north gallery front.
The German congregation appears to have
vacated the church between 1818 and 1828. (ref. 43) In
1845 or 1846 it was occupied as ’Jireh Chapel’ by
a group of Baptists who had split away from Zoar
Chapel in Great Alie Street, led by Frederick
Tryon. By 1852 they had disbanded, (ref. 129) to be
followed by the United Free Methodists, for
whom the property was purchased in 1858. (ref. 130) In
1864 the front of the building was extended
northwards, covering the court-yard which had
formerly separated it from the street. The architect in charge of the alterations was C. McJ.
North. (ref. 131)
In 1887 the building was purchased by the
Rev. Prebendary R. C. Billing, rector of Christ
Church, Spitalfields. It was converted into a
parish hall by the removal of the galleries and
pulpit, and reopened on 7 November 1887. (ref. 122)
Between 1912 and 1916 extensive repairs were
carried out, the roof and upper parts of the walls
being totally rebuilt at a cost of £1,200. (ref. 132)
The original stone facade was destroyed in
1864 and little of the old interior remains except
two round-headed windows in the south wall, a
bold dentil cornice bordering the ceiling and a
coloured plaque bearing the royal arms. The
latter once belonged to La Patente, a reminder of
its origin in letters patent granted by James II.
Nos. 24 and 26 Hanbury Street
Formerly Nos. 9 and 10 Brown's Lane
These two houses (Plate 70c) were probably
built in about 1717–18. In February 1717/18
Wood, Michell and Haulsey made an outright
conveyance to Joseph Saubere of Spitalfields, silk
dresser, of a piece of ground, the site of Nos. 24
and 26, said in the memorial of the deed to be
described in an annexed ’Modell or Plattforme’ no
longer surviving. (ref. 133) In December 1719 Saubere
made a mortgage lease of the two new brick
messuages, said to be lately erected by him, to
Simon Michell for five hundred years to secure
£367 10s. (ref. 120) Until recently a rainwater-head
marked 171– could be seen on the houses. (ref. 109) In
1727 one house was occupied by a pewterer or
brazier and the other by a ’gentleman’. (ref. 134)
No. 24 was occupied in 1759 and 1766 by
David Godin, (ref. 43) perhaps the weaver for whom
designs now in the Victoria and Albert Museum
were made, (ref. 135) and partner in the firm of Godin
and Ogier who undertook in 1745 to raise a body
of sixty of their workmen to resist the Young
Pretender. (ref. 39)
No. 26 was occupied in 1743 and 1759 by
James Ouvry, perhaps the James Ouvry who also
had commercial premises at No. 29 Fournier
Street, (ref. 43) and who undertook in 1745 to raise a
body of nineteen of his workmen. (ref. 39) In 1766 and
1773 it was occupied by James Ouvry, junior, (ref. 43) a
mantua and black-silk weaver (ref. 108) and a trustee
under the Local Act of 1772. In 1803 and 1805
it was occupied by a carpenter. (ref. 43)
They were built as a pair of single-fronted
houses, two rooms deep and with mirrored plans,
each house containing three storeys and a roof
garret. Except for the ground storey, the fronts
are uniformly designed and faced with yellow
brown brick. The three windows evenly spaced
in each upper storey have red brick jambs and
gauged flat arches, those of the first-floor windows
being stepped up in a manner suggesting triple
keyblocks without the usual surface projection. In
addition, the soffit of the middle window-arch is
cut to give a serpentine profile on the face. The
second-floor arches have slightly cambered soffits,
but this might be due to rebuilding. The windows
have moulded flush frames containing sashes with
slender glazing bars at No. 26, and modern casements or sashes at No. 24. The stucco-faced ground
storey of No. 24 is finished with a narrow cornice
resting on consoles, apparently Victorian work.
No. 26 has a wooden shop-front, probably early
nineteenth century, with slender Doric pilasters
and an entablature with a mutuled cornice. Both
houses have recessed garret fronts, filled with
casements.
No. 28 Hanbury Street
Formerly No. 11 Brown's Lane
Rebuilt
This was described in September 1718 as lately
built by Samuel Phipps of Spitalfields, bricklayer,
who in that month received a conveyance of
No. 17 Princelet Street, on to which No. 28
Hanbury Street backs, from Wood, Michell, their
trustees and Samuel Worrall. (ref. 136) In July 1719
Wood, Michell and their trustees conveyed
No. 28 to Phipps, it being said to have been built
by him. (ref. 137) In 1728 Phipps granted a mortgage
lease to a butcher. (ref. 138)
The present building is of no interest.
No. 30 Hanbury Street
Formerly No. 12 Brown's Lane
Rebuilt
This was probably built about 1718–19. The
house, together with No. 19 Princelet Street and
the ground between them, was conveyed by
Wood, Michell and their trustees to Samuel
Worrall in July 1719. (ref. 139) In February 1721/2
Worrall made a conveyance, probably as a mortgage, of these two houses, described as lately
erected by him. (ref. 140)
The present building is of no interest.
Nos. 32–38 (even) Hanbury Street
Formerly Nos. 13–15 (consec.) Brown's Lane
No. 32 rebuilt
These houses were doubtless built, together
with Nos. 21–25 (odd) Princelet Street and
Nos. 65–79 (odd) Brick Lane, in 1705–6 (see
page 189). No. 34, a single-fronted house, two
rooms deep, and Nos. 36 and 38 (originally one
house), double-fronted and one room deep, contain cellar basements and four storeys, and the
fronts are very similar to those of Nos. 21–25
(odd) Princelet Street. Here, however, the band
courses between the storeys are stucco-faced, and
the top-storey windows are casements, some of
two and others of three lights. No. 32 is a modern
building of no interest.
Nos. 21, 25–35 (odd) Hanbury Street
Formerly Nos. 27, 25–20 (consec.) Brown's Lane
No. 21 rebuilt
These houses, like the rest of the north side of
Hanbury Street, were not part of the Wood-Michell estate.
No. 21 was probably rebuilt for the first time in
1756 under a building lease granted by Granville
Wheler of Otterden Place, Kent, to Edward
Wollstonecraft of Primrose Street, Bishopsgate,
gentleman. (ref. 141) The present house is of no interest.
Nos. 25–31 were perhaps rebuilt by Daniel
Marsillat, carpenter, who lived in one of the four
’old messuages’ on this site when it was leased to
him by Granville Wheler in October 1740. (ref. 142)
No. 29 was refronted in December 1846. (ref. 143)
Nos. 25 and 27 are single-fronted houses, built
as a pair with mirrored plans. Each house is two
rooms deep and contains three storeys and a roof
garret. The ground storey has been very much
altered and the upper part is faced with coursed
stucco. Each house has three flush-framed windows in each upper storey.
Nos. 29 and 31 are single-fronted houses, three
storeys high and two rooms deep, with a roof garret. The rebuilt fronts are of yellow brick,
but the recessed garret fronts appear to be original,
each containing a six-light casement. (fn. d)
The history of Nos. 33 and 35 is not known.
They appear to have been rebuilt throughout,
their plain yellow brick fronts suggesting a date
around 1800.
Nos. 37–43 (odd) Hanbury Street
Formerly Nos. 19–16 (consec.) Brown's Lane
In October 1750 Granville Wheler granted a
sixty-year building lease of the site of Nos. 37,
39 and 41 to Alexander Christie of No. 85 Brick
Lane, carpenter, the three houses being then
empty. (ref. 145) They were not, however, rebuilt.
They had, together with No. 43 Hanbury Street
and Nos. 81–85 (odd) Brick Lane, been leased to
an Andrew Mayer in 1691 (ref. 146) and, like No. 85
Brick Lane, may date from a period soon after
that lease (Plate 55b).
In December 1755 No. 43 was described as ’a
new built messuage not yet occupied’, (ref. 147) but this
can refer only to a rebuilding of the upper storey.
In 1773 and 1818 No. 43 was occupied by
George Wagstaffe, a bookseller and a trustee under
the Local Act of 1782.
Nos. 37, 39 and 41 are single-fronted houses,
three storeys high and one room deep, with a roof
garret, possibly added. The fronts have been partially refaced or rebuilt, but the original character
remains. The yellow brick face has a narrow
bandcourse just below the second-storey window
sills, and a wider one between the second and third
storeys. The windows, which are grouped in
pairs, have gauged flat arches of red brick, stone
sills, and moulded flush frames containing altered
or modern sashes. The ground storey of each
house contains a shop-front, but only that at
No. 37 is of any interest, with its coved fascia
and canted bay window. The back elevation of
these houses is generally similar to the front,
except that the windows have rough segmental
arches. No. 43 belongs to this group of houses,
but the fronts to Hanbury Street and Brick Lane
have been rebuilt. A conspicuous weather
boarded garret storey extends over all the houses,
but No. 43 alone has the weavers’ wide casements.