91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque

Ewer Street burial ground

Inscription

Ewer Street Burial Ground

{On the small information board:}
Site of Ewer Street burial ground
1674 - 1762 Part of Quaker meeting house. 1776 - 1814 In the grounds of Baptist Church. c.1861 Unearthed during the building of Charing Cross railway. 1987 Bones and skulls from hundreds of bodies rediscovered.

Site: Ewer Street burial ground (2 memorials)

SE1, Ewer Street

Current maps show Ewer Street shaped like a T on its side - very unusual. An 1862 map shows an L-shaped Ewer Street (without the northern branch), immediately to the north of the railway, whereas currently the east-west section is to the south of the line. All a good indication of the disruption brought by the railway.

A 1746 map shows the L-shaped "Euers Street" with a "Qu M" in the L's corner, and a "Burying Gr" adjacent, to the west.

The railway line must have used the land occupied by the east-west section of Ewer Street and by the buildings, and burial ground, on its southern side. And a replacement means of travelling east-west was provided by creating a new Ewer Street alongside the line, on the south.

We are pleased to have found the Quaker Meeting House on a map. Presumably the Baptist Church occupied the same site, possibly the same building, and we are disappointed not to have found a picture of it.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Ewer Street burial ground

Subjects commemorated i

Charing Cross Railway Company

IanVisits has reprinted an article from the Illustrated London News about the...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Ewer Street Burial Ground

St Saviour's Southwark has some good reports describing this burial ground at...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Ewer Street burial ground

Also at this site i

Ewer Street bomb shelter

Ewer Street bomb shelter

We found each of these civilian casualties in the CWGC database and the make ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Aston Martin

Aston Martin

SW3, Henniker Mews

This is a gated mews and the plaque is out of sight from the street. We were lucky that the gate was open on the day we visited. Only a...

1 subject commemorated
Dr. Barnardo - Cable Street

Dr. Barnardo - Cable Street

E1, Cable Street, Barnardo Gardens

Barnado Gardens. This block was built by the London County Council in 1957. It was named after Dr Thomas Barnardo (1845 - 1905), who open...

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Frank Matcham - Coliseum

Frank Matcham - Coliseum

WC2, St Martin's Lane, London Coliseum

We thank our colleague for spotting and snapping this on a recent visit to the ENO. It's located on the landing by the dress circle bar.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Lawrence Hall - Viscountess Lascelles

Lawrence Hall - Viscountess Lascelles

SW1, Greycoat Street

The Lascelles plaque is to the right of the central door, Lambourne to the left. Built 1928, architect: John Murray Easton.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Thomas Crapper

Thomas Crapper

SE20, Thornsett Road, 12

Thomas Crapper, 1837 - 1910, engineer, developer of the controlled flow cistern lived here. The London Borough of Bromley

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator