91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Gates

Harland & Wolff factory gates

Inscription

Harland and Wolff

Site: Harland & Wolff factory gates (2 memorials)

E16, Lyle Park

The steps are rather grand for a public park and look to us as if left over from a now-demolished substantial building (factory, head office, etc.) but we can find no evidence that any such building ever existed here.  gives "The Ordnance Survey map of 1951-52 shows the terrace fronting the river with a bandstand surrounded by a circle of trees and ornamental gardens, and a flight of steps leading down to a recreation ground..."

This park was created when, in 1924, Sir Leonard Lyle (1882 - 1954, of Tate and Lyle) gave the land to West Ham, land that a shows mainly undeveloped. It seems that Lyle never used this ground commercially. We wonder when and why he acquired it. Was it ground that he planned to expand into? Or did he acquire it specifically to gift to West Ham?

This prompted us to research the T&L history in the area, and it's not simple. Henry Tate and Leonard Lyle set up their factories in the area independently of each other. The reports that the Tate site has been in continuous use since Henry Tate arrived in 1878, so that's the huge site shown as 'Tate and Lyle Sugars' on current Google Maps, on the north bank of the Thames, south of City Airport.

About 5 years later Abraham Lyle set up his own factory, very close to Tate. We think this is the site marked on the same 1914 map as "Plaistow Wharf (sugar refinery)", a little to the west of this park.

In 1921 the companies merged but kept their separate factories. To the north west of Knights Road, just inland from the 1914 "sugar refinery" Google maps shows "Tate and Lyle". This is the massive , still known as Plaistow Wharf.

Note that the H&W gates come from a factory site a few miles to the east which has no connections with Lyle or the sugar factories. The gates are presumably only in this park because they are big and this was the nearest public site that could take them.

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:
Harland & Wolff factory gates

Subjects commemorated i

Harland & Wolff - Galleon's Point

Shipbuilders, ship repairers and engineers with an address in Woolwich Manor ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Harland & Wolff factory gates

Created by i

Newham Council

West Ham was merged with parts of Barking and Woolwich to form the London Bor...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Harland & Wolff factory gates

Also at this site i

Harland & Wolff plaque

Harland & Wolff plaque

These ornamental gates stood a the entrance to Harland & Wolff Ltd, shipb...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Leverton arch

Leverton arch

WC2, Flitcroft Street, St Giles Church

This 1800 arch was designed by one of the churchwardens at the time, Leverton, and was originally at the northern entrance on St Giles Hi...

1 subject commemorated, 7 creators
Sir Follett Holt

Sir Follett Holt

EC3, Byward Street, Tower Hill Terrace

Since they are rather lovely we chose to photo one of the gate-post sculpted finials rather than the inscription. The other sculpture de...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
York Watergate

York Watergate

WC2, Victoria Embankment Gardens

The streets laid out on the site of York House were named: Villiers Street, Duke Street, Buckingham Street, George Court and Of Alley (no...

4 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
NPL gates

NPL gates

TW11, Hampton Road

A nearby information board provides: "Following site redevelopment these splendid gates, from the original National Physical Laboratory (...

1 subject commemorated
Altab Ali arch

Altab Ali arch

E1, Whitechapel Road, Altab Ali Park

Wrought-iron arch created as a memorial to Altab Ali and other victims of racist attacks. Symbolically combines elements of Bangladeshi a...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator