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Plaque

River Effra - Canterbury Square 1

Erection date: /7/2016

Inscription

The hidden River Effra is beneath your feet.

Site: River Effra pavement plaques - 6 (6 memorials)

SW9, Brixton Road, Canterbury Square

Photographed and numbered from north to south.

A nearby information board:
On your right is the old Roman road to the south coast (now the Brixton Road). Here, bridges once crossed the River Effra but today, the river flows beneath Canterbury Square on its way to the Thames at Vauxhall.
The village of Brixton did not exist until the end of the 18th century. The 1806 enclosure of the lands of the Manor of Lambeth (which belonged to the Archbishop of Canterbury) and the arrival of the railway in 1862 resulted in speculative house-building for commuters into central London.
A growing community needed shops. Nearby,  {building still there, the flat-iron between Ferndale Road and Stockwell Avenue} opened in 1877 and was the first purpose-built department store in the United Kingdom.
To your left is Canterbury Crescent, where you can still see the remnants of the old St John's School {the Tudor-style St John's Buildings, which you can see here}. It was built in 1853 at a cost of £1,600, on land donated by philanthropist Benedict Angell. Also in the Crescent were a stables for resting carriage horses, the Canterbury Arms public house and the  (London, Gloucestershire and North Hants Dairy}. The ornately styled mansion flats immediately to your left {the red brick Dover Mansions} were popular with music hall performers, and these artistes gave Brixton a bohemian flavour. In the 1920s, the pioneer sexologist Havelock Ellis lived here.
Discover Lambeth

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This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
River Effra - Canterbury Square 1

Subjects commemorated i

River Effra

At the Brockwell Lido plaque there is an information board which begins by ex...

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This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
River Effra - Canterbury Square 1

Created by i

Atelier Works

From their website: "We are an award-winning design agency, with over 30 year...

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Faranak

Artist based in Lambeth, active c.2018.

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This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
River Effra - Canterbury Square 1

Also at this site i

River Effra - Canterbury Square 2

River Effra - Canterbury Square 2

The hidden River Effra is beneath your feet.

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River Effra - Canterbury Square 3

River Effra - Canterbury Square 3

The hidden River Effra is beneath your feet.

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River Effra - Canterbury Square 4

River Effra - Canterbury Square 4

The hidden River Effra is beneath your feet.

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River Effra - Canterbury Square 5

River Effra - Canterbury Square 5

The hidden River Effra is beneath your feet.

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River Effra - Canterbury Square 6

River Effra - Canterbury Square 6

The hidden River Effra is beneath your feet.

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Nearby Memorials

Philip Blairman House

Philip Blairman House

E1, Elder Street, 3, Philip Blairman House

There is an almost identical plaque on Celia Blairman House in Folgate Street.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Tom Baker

Tom Baker

W1, Berwick Street, 83-84

"London County Council"? We don't think so. A Sir Tom Baker has a bespoke tailoring business around the corner at 4 D’Arblay Street, wher...

1 subject commemorated
Putney New Bridge

Putney New Bridge

SW15, Church Square, St Marys Church

So the churchyard must have occupied the ground between the church and the river.

2 subjects commemorated, 3 creators
Noor Inayat Khan - Taviton Street

Noor Inayat Khan - Taviton Street

WC1, Taviton Street, 4

The Covid-19 pandemic meant the unveiling ceremony took place on Facebook.

War dead | WW2
2 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, oblong

General Gordon's birth place - lost plaque, oblong

SE18, Woolwich Common, 29

At our request Rosemary and Richard Christophers of The Lightbox, previously Woking Museum, put paid to the rumour that the plaque is hel...

1 subject commemorated