Wilkes Street South of Hanbury Street
In November 1718 the future line of the street
was described as ’the cross street intended to be
built’, but building was not begun until February
1721/2. The houses are generally three storeys
high, some having cellar-basements and most
having roof garrets. The east side, whose southern
end consisted of four of the largest houses in the
street, begins with the front of No. 13/15 Fournier Street, three storeys high and five windows
wide, with an altered and stucco-faced ground
storey.
No. 2 Wilkes Street
Formerly No. 2 Wood Street
This house, like Nos. 13–21 (odd) Fournier
Street to its south, was built by William Tayler,
citizen and joiner of London, under a lease from
Wood and Michell in March 1725, being then
lately erected; the lease was witnessed by Marmaduke Smith of Princelet Street, carpenter. (ref. 148) The
site had been vacant in August 1723. (ref. 149) A lead
rainwater-head on the front of the house bears
Tayler's initials.
It is a double-fronted house, one room deep, its
front elevation consistent with the altered front of
No. 13/15 Fournier Street, but not itself altered,
though now in poor repair. Paint conceals the
colour of the brick, which is probably yellow with
red dressings to the segmental-arched windows.
These are grouped in pairs on each side of the
doorway and the blind window in the middle of
each upper storey. The wooden doorcase, with
fluted Doric pilasters and a cornice-hood projecting on carved trusses, is similar to those at
Nos. 17 and 16/18 Fournier Street. Inside the
house is a dog-leg staircase, with moulded closed
strings, turned balusters alternately with plain and
twisted shafts, and column-newels supporting
moulded straight handrails. The rooms generally
retain some of their original plain rebated panelling
in two heights.
No. 4 Wilkes Street
Formerly No. 3 Wood Street; sometime the Wood Street
Protestant Dissenting School, afterwards British and
Foreign School
Rebuilt
This house was described as ’now begun to be
built’ in the ninety-nine-and-three-quarter-year
building lease granted by Wood and Michell in
August 1723 to John Roundeau of Shoreditch,
weaver, (ref. 149) probably the John Rondeau of Spital
fields who undertook in 1745 to raise a body of
fifty-seven of his workmen to resist the Young
Pretender. (ref. 39) The house was in existence in
January 1723/4. (ref. 150) It was a double-fronted
house and generally similar to No. 2 except that
its floor levels were lower. An engraving of the
front, made when it was used as a school and before
it received an elaborate Victorian dress of stucco,
shows a stock brick face, five windows wide and
bounded by plain pilasters. The centrally placed
door had a doorcase of wood, similar to those at
Nos. 8, 10, 20, 31, 33 and 35 Fournier Street.
The flush-framed windows had high segmental
arches, presumably of red brick, with triple keystones. The middle window of the third storey
was concealed by a large segmental-headed panel
bearing the following inscription: ’The—Protestant Difsenting-Charity School—Founded in the
year 1717—for ye Instruction & Annual
Cloathg—of 50 Boys and 50 Girls—supported by
voluntary Contributions—and open to all Denominations.’ The mansard roof had a weather-boarded front with five three-light casements.
After its Victorian transformation, the front
had a decided Baroque flavour (Plate 47c). The
ground storey was faced with coursed stucco, the
windows having raised keyblocks rising to the
deep bandcourse at first-floor level. The pompous doorcase had an open segmental pediment
resting on pilasters with vermiculated blocks, and a
vermiculated keystone supported a cartouche in
the pediment tympanum. Above the doorway
was a large rectangular tablet, probably inscribed,
and framed by strapwork. The windows of both
upper storeys were given eared and shouldered
architraves, plain but broken by keyblocks and
finished with segmental-curving cornices. A
moulded stringcourse underlined the third-storey
windows and the front was finished with a bold
cornice, surmounted by a high parapet with open
strapwork panels in front of the five garret windows.
For some hundred years or more the building
was occupied as a school-house, first as a Protestant Dissenting Charity School, then as a British
and Foreign Society School and finally by the
London School Board. The first of these had
been founded in 1717 by a group of Noncon
formists and was open to all, irrespective of
creed. (ref. 161) In January 1747/8 the school was
described as being of Fashion Street but ’now
kept in Keate Street’ (ref. 152) (the present Thrawl
Street). The school is said to have been associated
with Dr. Isaac Watts, (ref. 153) but if so this was presumably before it moved to Wood (Wilkes)
Street as Watts died in 1748. In March 1796 the
trustees purchased the house in Wood Street: (ref. 154)
from the deed it appears that the school was
then already established on the site, but the house
had probably still been in private occupation in
1783. (ref. 43) The conveyance was made in 1796, for
£140, from James Collins (a solicitor of No. 33
Spital Square, who in 1808 was treasurer of the
school) to Peter Guillebaud (a weaver of No. 25
Spital Square) and six other of the managers of and
subscribers to the school.
The school in Wood Street is said first to have
provided for thirty boys. In 1808 it apparently
contained fifty boys and fifty girls but in 1827
these numbers were reduced (ref. 153) and in 1830 it
contained forty-five boys and forty-five girls, who
were clothed as well as educated. (ref. 151) In 1840 the
premises were occupied, together with the school,
by ’Susan Back, teacher of French’. (ref. 155)
In 1840–1 the school was enlarged to accommodate two hundred boys and two hundred girls
by the addition of a building at the back, on what
had been the playground. (ref. 156) The Privy Council
Committee on Education contributed £250
towards the £1,400 needed for the work, and
thereafter paid the salaries of the master and mistress and pupil teachers. The school was henceforward a public elementary school conducted on
the principles of the British and Foreign Society, a
small weekly sum being paid for the children. (ref. 157)
The clothing of the children was discontinued. (ref. 153)
In 1846 the buildings were rated to ’William
Beck’ as a ’School of Science’. (ref. 43)
In 1873 the premises were leased to the London School Board, the managers of the school
reserving the right to use it on Sundays and certain
evenings. (ref. 158) A Sunday-school was run in connexion with Trinity Congregational Church,
Mile End New Town.
In c. 1873 the girls and infants were accommodated in the house on the street while the boys’
class-room occupied the newer building at the
back. (ref. 159) The schoolmaster also lived in the
house. (ref. 157)
The school continued to be run by the London School Board until 1884: (ref. 153) the Board's lease of
the property ended in 1887 and it reverted to the
trustees who sold it in 1892 to the rector of
Christ Church, Spitalfields, for use as a Youth
Labour Home of the Church Army, the school
funds being united with those of the school in
Orchard Street, Hackney. (ref. 156) By the early
twentieth century the building was used as commercial and industrial premises. It was destroyed
during the 1939–45 war by enemy action and has
been rebuilt.
No. 6 Wilkes Street
Formerly No. 4 Wood Street
See Nos. 2 and 4 Princelet Street (page 185).
A double-fronted house (Plate 71b), one room
deep, No. 6 Wilkes Street has a three-storeyed
front generally similar to that of No. 4 in its
original state. The floor levels are again lower
than those of the neighbouring house on the south
side (No. 4), and the segmental window-arches
are struck from smaller radii. The front, now
crudely painted, is of yellow brick with red brick
dressings to the windows, which have flush
frames containing sashes with slender glazing
bars. The ground storey, altered to serve for a
shop, probably around 1790, has two original
windows on the right of the door, and an altered
pair on the left, all with shutters. A wooden
entablature extends across the front, breaking into
a shallow bow over the door, which is flanked by
narrow pilasters. This five-windows-wide front
has in addition a blind half window against the
party wall with No. 2 Princelet Street, which has
a return front to Wilkes Street, and was originally
uniform with No. 6 Wilkes Street and No. 4
Princelet Street.
Nos. 8–12 (even) Wilkes Street
Formerly Nos. 5–7 (consec.) Wood Street
No. 12 rebuilt
See Nos. 1–5 (odd) Princelet Street (page 187).
The building leases for these houses and those
granted on the same day to William Tayler for
the building of Nos. 1–7 (odd) on the west side
were the first granted in the ’new street called or
intended to be called Wood Street’. (ref. 160)
No. 8 was occupied in 1743 and 1750 by
Abraham Deheul who in 1745 undertook to
raise a body of forty-seven of his workmen to
resist the Young Pretender. (ref. 94)
The northern corner of Wilkes and Princelet
Streets is occupied by the return front of the refronted exterior of No. 1 Princelet Street. There
are four storeys, the first three faced with stucco
and finishing with a moulded cornice, whereas the
fourth is of yellow brick.
No. 8 Wilkes Street is a double-fronted house,
one room deep, its five-windows-wide front having
been rebuilt, probably around 1870, with a fourth
storey in place of the original garret. Inside the
house is an original dog-leg staircase, similar to
many others in the locality, and the ground- and
first-floor rooms are lined with plain rebated
panelling. Marble chimneypieces of early
eighteenth-century pattern, and later ones of wood
and composition, embellish the rooms.
No. 10 is a single-fronted house, two rooms
deep, containing a cellar-basement, three storeys,
and a roof garret. The front, above the ground
storey, is of yellow brick with red brick dressings
to the three windows evenly spaced in each storey.
The first-floor windows have gauged flat arches
but those above are segmental-headed, due, perhaps, to partial rebuilding. All have flush frames
with modern sashes. The stucco-faced ground
storey has two windows with recessed sashes, and
the doorway is on the left. This has an original
door with six fielded panels, over which is a simple
radial fanlight of metal. The doorway is flanked
by reeded pilaster-strips of wood, and there is a
similar pilaster-strip on the extreme right of the
front. They support a simple entablature, no
doubt intended for a shop fascia. The garret
storey has a recessed front with a four-light casement
No. 12 is a single-fronted house with a rebuilt
front of no interest.
Nos. 14 and 16 Wilkes Street and 18
Han bury Street
Formerly Nos. 8–10 (consec.) Wood Street
No. 14 rebuilt
See Nos. 20 and 22 Hanbury Street (page 190),
and Plate 72a.
In 1750 and 1773 No. 14 was occupied by
John Freemount and Company, weavers, who in
1745 undertook to raise a body of twenty of their
workmen. (ref. 161)
No. 14 is a single-fronted house with a rebuilt
front of no interest although it probably preserves
the pattern of the original fenestration and has a
re-used front door.
No. 16, a single-fronted house, has the least
altered front in this terrace of houses between
Princelet and Hanbury Streets which, when first
built, were probably uniform in their external
appearance. A general similarity to No. 10 will
be noticed, but here at No. 16 all the upper windows have gauged flat arches. Again, the ground
storey is stuccoed and finished with a simple
entablature of wood. The doorway, with an
original six-panelled door, is flanked by reeded
pilaster-strips with pannelled stops. The recessed
front of the garret storey has three casements.
No. 18 is double-fronted and one room deep,
having a return front to Hanbury Street, two windows wide. The exterior, at least, appears to have
been rebuilt about 1800 and the very plain front
to Wilkes Street now has three windows, the left
one blind, widely spaced in each of the two upper
storeys. The fronts are faced with yellow brick,
now stained, with gauged flat arches to the windows, which have stone sills and recessed sashes
with slender glazing bars.
Nos. 1–7 (odd) Wilkes Street
Formerly Nos. 26–23 (consec.) Wood Street
These houses (Plate 70d), together with Nos.
5–11 (odd) Fournier Street, were built by William
Tayler, citizen and joiner, under ninety-nine
year building leases from Wood and Michell of
February 1721/2, the houses having then been
built by him. (ref. 162) The corner house was the Three
Tun Tavern. (ref. 163) These houses are dissimilar to
No. 14 Fournier Street which was probably built
and occupied by the same William Tayler.
No. 1 was let in tenements in 1812 and 1818. (ref. 43)
No. 3 was occupied in 1750 and 1759 by Peter
Duthoit, a black-silk weaver who was a captain
in the Trained Bands from 1746 to 1762. (ref. 164)
No. 1, the south-west corner house, has a front
to Wilkes Street, four windows wide, and a return
to Fournier Street, two windows wide. Both
fronts were rebuilt, apparently about 1800, in a
very utilitarian style, yellow brick being used for
the general facing and for the segmental arches of
the windows, which have stone sills and cemented
reveals. On the Wilkes Street front the second
window of each storey is blind, the rest having
double-hung sashes with slender glazing bars.
The doorway, with a six-panelled door and plain
fanlight set in a simple arch-headed opening, is
flanked by a window on the right and a modern
shop-front on the left.
No. 3, a single-fronted house, appears to have
been entirely rebuilt in the late nineteenth century. The stock brick front is four storeys high
and two windows wide, the ground storey being
faced with coursed stucco and the windows above
having Victorian Baroque architraves with
cornice-hoods.
Nos. 5 and 7 are single-fronted houses, the
former having three windows in each upper storey
and the latter only two, placed left and centre.
The ground storey of both houses is stucco-faced
up to the first-floor sill level, No. 5 having a
rectangular doorway on the left of two windows,
and No. 7 having two arch-headed windows of
different size. The upper face of both houses is of
yellow brick with red brick jambs and gauged flat
arches to the windows, which have stone sills and
exposed flush frames containing sashes with slender glazing bars. No. 7 has a rebuilt and featureless return to Puma Court.
Nos. 9–15 (odd) Wilkes Street and
No. 10 Puma Court
Formerly Nos. 22–19 (consec.) Wood Street, and No. 10
Red Lion Court
Nos. 9–15 (odd) Wilkes Street rebuilt
These houses were also built by William Tayler
under leases from Wood and Michell of March
1723/4, the houses being then lately built by
him. (ref. 165) Nos. 9 and 11 were originally one house.
They were possibly rebuilt between 1850 and
1855 (ref. 43)
No. 10 Puma Court has a front to Wilkes
Street, with an early nineteenth-century shop-front in the ground storey. The upper face is of
yellow brick with red brick jambs and segmental
arches to the three windows of each upper storey.
These windows have recessed box-frames containing modern sashes.
Nos. 9 and 11 are single-fronted houses,
apparently rebuilt, with stucco-faced fronts three
storeys high and two windows wide. The arch-headed doorways and the rectangular window
openings are dressed with moulded stucco architraves.
Nos. 13 and 15 are single-fronted houses, evidently rebuilt about 1790. Each house has a plain
front, three storeys high, built of yellow and pink
brick. There are two windows in each storey,
with gauged flat arches, stone sills, and recessed
sashes with slender glazing bars. No. 13 has, on
the left of the two ground-floor windows, a charming doorcase of wood with compo enrichments. The arch-headed opening, containing the
six-panelled door and a cobweb fanlight, is
flanked by narrow pilasters with moulded panels
containing lion masks and flower pendants.
Flattened consoles, each adorned with a scallop
and an acanthus leaf, support the dentilled cornice.
It is evident, from the enriched transom surviving,
that No. 15 also had a decorative doorcase of late
eighteenth-century design, but the arched opening
is now framed by a coarse stucco architrave. A
shop-front of poor design replaces the original
ground-storey windows.
Nos. 17–27 (odd) Wilkes Street
Formerly Nos. 18–13 (consec.) Wood Street
No. 27 demolished
Nos. 17–25 (Plates 71a, 72a) were built by
Marmaduke Smith, described as citizen and blacksmith of London, under ninety-nine-year leases
from Wood and Michell of January 1723/4, the
houses being said then to have been built by
him. (ref. 166) They are, however, more similar in style
to others on the estate for which Samuel Worrall
took the building lease than to No. 10 opposite
built by Smith.
No. 27 was architecturally uniform with Nos.
17–25 and was doubtless built at the same time.
It was said to be lately erected in January
1723/4. (ref. 167) It was leased by Wood and Michell
to the latter's son and heir in June 1725, (ref. 168) and
in October 1732 the lease was assigned to Marmaduke Smith, described as a carpenter. (ref. 169)
No. 21 was probably occupied in 1773 by the
Rev. J. R. Bouillier, a minister of Threadneedle
Street (and probably of the Fournier Street)
French Church. (ref. 170)
No. 23 was occupied in 1750 and 1759 by
Stephen Paris and Company, (ref. 43) probably the firm
for whom silk designs in the Victoria and Albert
Museum were made. (ref. 135) In 1856 it was apparently
occupied as a ladies' school. (ref. 171)
Nos. 17–25 are terrace-houses of uniform design, single-fronted and two rooms deep, with
cellar-basements, three storeys, and roof garrets.
The plan, which is a standard one of its day, has
the narrow hall on the left of the front room, with
a full-width room over, and the dog-leg staircase
on the left of the back room, which is smaller than
the front and has an angle fireplace against the
back and party walls. The fronts are akin to many
others in the locality and are built of yellow brick,
with red brick jambs and segmental arches to the
window openings, three in each upper storey and
two in the ground storey with the doorway on the
left. Each house has, or had, a wooden doorcase
of Doric design, with pilaster shafts of chamfered
edged blocks, and a triglyphed entablature finished
with a cornice-hood. The windows have
moulded flush frames which, with the top sashes,
are segmental-headed. Glazing bars, where
existing, are of slender section. Each house has a
hipped roof with its ridge at a right angle to the
front, and the weather-boarded garret fronts contain weavers’ windows. The interiors are finished
in a simple style, the rooms being lined with rebated panelling in two heights. The dog-leg
staircases have closed strings, turned balusters of
simple profile, column-newels, and moulded
straight handrails.
No. 27 (demolished) was a double-fronted
house, one room deep, with a five-windows-wide
front continuing the design of Nos. 17–25.
Nos. 29 and 31 Wilkes Street
Formerly Nos. 12 and 11 Wood Street
Demolished
In June 1719 Wood and Michell leased for
forty-one years to George Cole, dyer, and
Andrew Cole a house, divided into two dwellings,
on the south side of Hanbury Street, with a distilhouse or dyehouse on its east side, and a ’shop’
and yard or garden on its south side. The dye-house, which occupied the site of Nos. 29 and 31,
was probably a timber structure, and was presumably rebuilt at the time of this lease. The
buildings which survived until the war of 1939
1945 were of brick in a style suggestive of a rather
earlier date of construction than Nos. 17–27. By
January 1723/4 No. 27 had been built on the
yard or garden. (ref. 172)
In December 1728 the premises were occupied
by John King, dyer. (ref. 173)
Nos. 29 and 31 were single-fronted houses, two
rooms deep, containing a cellar-basement, three
storeys, and roof garrets. The fronts were
uniformly designed and built of stock brick with
gauged flat arches of red brick to the windows, of
which the upper storeys of each house had three.
The ground storey of No. 29 had two windows
and, on the left, a doorway with a wooden door-case finished with a cornice-hood on consoles. No. 31 had a similar doorway, but the rest of the
ground-storey front had been replaced by an early
nineteenth-century shop-front with a corner
entrance flanked by slender columns. The windows generally had flush frames containing sashes
with slender glazing bars.