91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque

(relocated) General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, blue

General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, blue
General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, blue
Inscription

General Charles George Gordon, born here 1833, killed at Khartoum 1885.
London County Council

{On the small blue rectangular plaque below:}
When 29 The Common, Woolwich SE18 was demolished in 1971 the above plaque was presented to the Gordon Boys’ School by the Greater London Council.

This photo comes from . These two blue plaques are on display at Gordon's School, near Woking, on the external wall of one of the buildings there. OK, not really 'lost', but certainly lost to London.

was founded by public subscription, at the express wish of Queen Victoria, as the National Memorial to General Gordon.

Site: General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, blue (1 memorial)

SE18, Woolwich Common, 29

Before its demolition in 1972, this house had boasted, at different times, two plaques commemorating Gordon's birth. See General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, oblong for the other one. The house was built as 1 Kempt's Terrace and later became 29 The Common, Woolwich. We originally thought it was a little further south.

2022: Michiel Hegener wrote to correct our assessment of the location of this house. He attached a 1893-4 map taken from p.436, "” published by but we don't know any further details. This shows a row of 9 houses on the east side of Woolwich Common between Jackson Street and (what is now) Kempt Street both of which used to connect with The Common. The northern-most of these is marked no 29 (Woolwich Common), and is on the corner of the junction with Jackson Street. This also shows the 9 houses.

The book also contains a 1962 photograph (copied here) of the 9 houses, with the one on the northern corner, Gordon’s birthplace, closest to the camera, and with a round plaque (presumably this blue one) between the two first floor windows. The two northernmost houses were completed by 1833. “The first occupants of the corner house (later No. 29) were Maj. Gen. Henry William Gordon, RA, and his wife, Elizabeth, who was the daughter of Samuel Enderby, the eminent Greenwich-based whale-oil merchant. Here their fourth son, Charles George Gordon, was born in January 1833.” The rest of Kempt’s Terrace (another 5 houses) was not completed until c.1850. (The 2 houses at the southern end are in a totally different style and were part of a later development.)

Both maps show a footpath continuing the line of Jackson Street across the Common. Today this footpath no longer exists (and why would it, with Jackson Street no longer accessible?) but the to it does.

The oblong plaque was on the house at the time of that photograph, c.1920, whereas the blue one was on the house when it was photographed and still there when it was demolished, 1962-72.

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:
General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, blue

Subjects commemorated i

Major General Charles George Gordon

Army officer. Made his military reputation in China. Achieved lasting fame th...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, blue

Created by i

London County Council

Prior to the LCC London matters were run by church parishes. The LCC was the ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Mrs Baldwin at Kingsgate Community Centre

Mrs Baldwin at Kingsgate Community Centre

NW6, Kingsgate Road, 105 to 107, Kingsgate Community Centre

Only a foundation stone but the delightful carved border means that we'd collect this plaque whatever it commemorated.

2 subjects commemorated
Walter Pater

Walter Pater

W8, Earl's Terrace, 12 & 14

Pater lived here with his sisters 1885 - 93.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Oliver Goldsmith - SE5

Oliver Goldsmith - SE5

SE5, Peckham Road, Oliver Goldsmith Primary School

The plaque fails to explain why it is here, or why this school has this name, which is probably the same thing.  Trying to answer this qu...

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
African National Congress

African National Congress

N1, Penton Street, 28

From the Islington Tribune: "The three-storey office was the headquarters of the ANC between 1978 and 1994. It was there that Oliver Tamb...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
Elizabeth line

Elizabeth line

W2, Eastbourne Terrace, Paddington station

This must have been one of the Queen's last plaques.

2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator