91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque | Civilian war dead | WW1

The George and Devonshire

Inscription

The George and Devonshire, originally called The George, is a Grade II listed building, and has traded as a public house since the 1650's. It is the last pub still trading in what was Chiswick Village, the others having been demolished or closed down.
The George and Devonshire has had generations of publicans over the years including John Howell Burden, father of Arthur Howell Burden, the assistant purser of the Lusitania, aged 25, who was drowned when it was torpedoed by a German U-boat on 7th May 1915. Both are buried in Chiswick graveyard.
In the eighteenth century, smugglers used to row up the Thames with their contraband goods of rum and spirits and at a given signal pull over towards the huddle of fisher cottages between the river and the medieval church of St Nicholas. Somewhere among those tiny houses was the opening of a tunnel which led under the church to the George and Devonshire. There the boats would be unloaded and the goods carried up a secret passage, which led into the cellar. Evidence of this passageway can be seen today in the cellar of the George and Devonshire with two steps leading up to a bricked up doorway, facing towards the river!

How exciting - a hidden passageway!  For more secret tunnels see William Lyttle, the Mole man.

Site: The George and Devonshire (1 memorial)

W4, Burlington Lane, 8

Originally just called the George, the Devonshire was added by 1826, in reference to the Duke of Devonshire who owned the nearby Chiswick House.

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of plaquesoflondon.co.uk

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:
The George and Devonshire

Subjects commemorated i

John Howell Burden

Former publican of the George and Devonshire in Chiswick. Father of Arthur Ho...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Arthur Howell Burden

Assistant purser on the RMS Lusitania. Son of John Howell Burden. Died when t...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

RMS Lusitania

Passenger liner. She was awarded the Blue Riband for the fastest Atlantic cro...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Cholera - Hampstead - 1849

Cholera - Hampstead - 1849

NW3, New End, Heathside Preparatory School

Beneath the two windows to the left of the plaque there is some red granite, inscribed "1859", which looks like the remains of a drinking...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Sheila Sherlock

Sheila Sherlock

NW1, York Terrace East, 41

Dame Sheila Sherlock, MD, FRS, 1918 - 2001, world authority on the liver, professor of medicine, lived here 1970 - 2001. City of Westminster

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
The Mitre Public House - Greenwich

The Mitre Public House - Greenwich

SE10, Greenwich High Road, 291

The pub is actually within the Maritime Greenwich World Heritage Site, so it is being deceptively boastful by claiming that it has receiv...

2 subjects commemorated
Gielgud Theatre

Gielgud Theatre

W1, Shaftesbury Avenue, Gielgud Theatre, 33

Renamed from the Globe to the Gielgud Theatre in 1994.

2 subjects commemorated, 2 creators
Holborn Town Hall - Army

Holborn Town Hall - Army

WC1, High Holborn, former Holborn Town Hall, 193-7

At British Military Badges we found a similar plaque on sale for £250: “Moulded ivory coloured bakelite wall plaque. Measures approx. 35 ...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator