91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque

Nancy's Steps - plaque 2

Inscription

These steps and arch are surviving fragments of the 1831 London Bridge designed by John Rennie and built by his son Sir John Rennie.
These steps were the scene of the murder of Nancy in Charles Dickens' novel Oliver Twist.

Erected between April 2019 and August 2020, by unknown.

Site: Nancy's Steps (2 memorials)

SE1, Montague Close

The plaques both have the facts wrong; in the novel Nancy is murdered in her house. It is in the 1960 musical Oliver! that she is murdered at steps leading to London Bridge. However the steps are mentioned in the novel as explained at .

2016: We are grateful to Chris Harry who, via Facebook, has very helpfully provided further useful links for people who want to fully understand this Steps issue: a showing the bridge and its steps; a link to the (dead but works, 2022) and a link to the . That really is a very thorough analysis of the issue!

When we first visited this site (winter 2012) all one could see was the empty frame which had held plaque 1, to the left of the steps. So we are grateful to for having got there in time.

2016: still missing.

2020: Lionel Wright helpfully wrote via Facebook with the latest update: "Recently, probably in 2020, a new round plaque appeared near the foot of the stairs in the photo. It's been installed on the wall just inside the bridge tunnel to the right. Sadly the sign repeats the incorrect wording of its predecessor. Like Chris Harry I thought the Heritage section of Southwark Council was responsible. I wrote to Southwark Heritage to draw their attention to the mistakes in the wording. They told me it wasn't erected by the council. As the City of London Corporation manages London Bridge, I've written to the City Bridge Trust to ask if they know who sponsored the plaque."

One day someone will get this right.

August 2020: Our colleague Alan Patient took our new photos, capturing the new plaque. He remarks that Google Street View for April 2020 doesn't show it which narrows down its erection date.

2022: have got to grips with "Steps Gate" as it might be called, but probably isn't. They point out that the steps are remnants from the 1831 bridge, whereas the novel 'Oliver Twist' is set before that bridge was built. Any steps in place at that time belonged to the 1760 bridge which was the old medieval one with the houses and shops removed and the roadway widened.

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:
Nancy's Steps - plaque 2

Subjects commemorated i

London Bridge

Four stone bridges have spanned the Thames at this point. The first was built...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nancy in Oliver Twist

Character created by Charles Dickens in his novel Oliver Twist, first publish...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Charles Dickens

Born, son of Elizabeth and John Dickens, at No.1 Mile End Terrace, Landport, ...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Sir John Rennie

Civil engineer. Born 27 Stamford Street.  In London, worked on Waterloo, Sout...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

John Rennie, the elder

Engineer. Born Scotland. In 1791 he moved to London and set up his own busine...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Nancy's Steps - plaque 2

Also at this site i

Nancy's Steps - plaque 1

Nancy's Steps - plaque 1

Nancy's Steps These steps and arch are surviving fragments of the 1831 London...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Bow Road Underground Station

Bow Road Underground Station

E3, Bow Road

The plaque is inside the station foyer.

3 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Anne Boleyn beheaded - 1946

Anne Boleyn beheaded - 1946

EC3, Tower Green, Tower of London

This image comes from the 1946 short documentary film 'Prisoners of the Tower'. It is shown laid into the ground at the centre of a cobbl...

1 subject commemorated
Bombs 7/7/05 - Piccadilly line - WC1

Bombs 7/7/05 - Piccadilly line - WC1

WC1, Bernard Street, Russell Square Station

This plaque is identical to the one erected at King's Cross St. Pancras.

28 subjects commemorated
Thomas Stothard

Thomas Stothard

W1, Newman Street, 28

Nothing to do with Stothard but interesting anyway: Newman Passage, just south of this plaque, was the location in Michael Powell's 1960 ...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Crunchy - Grey Eagle Street

Crunchy - Grey Eagle Street

E1, Grey Eagle Street

Look to the roof-line to see Crunchy.  We photographed this in 2020 and, given all the developments in the area (and our backlog) it's qu...

1 subject commemorated