91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Plaque

(lost) William Blake - SE1 - lost plaque

William Blake - SE1 - lost plaque

Prior to erecting a 1907 Blake plaque in Broadwick Street the LCC investigated Blake’s various addresses. Doing this they discovered the Hercules Buildings address, which was at this time owned by the Corporation of the City of London so it was the Corporation that erected this plaque sometime around 1900.

This plaque, shown in both this drawing (by Frederick Adcock) and the photo of the house, was lost when the building was demolished in 1918, unless someone rescued it?

Site: William Blake - SE1 (2 memorials)

SE1, Hercules Road

Blake lived here with his wife, Catherine, throughout the 1790s. The address was "13 Hercules Buildings". By 1912 it had been renumbered 23. The shows 'Hercules Buildings' was the terrace of small houses on the south side of Hercules Road between what are now Cosser Street and Kennington Road.

From : In 2015 the Ashmolean in Oxford held an exhibition about Blake's studio here. Michael Phillips recreated "the original studio using a combination of the archival blueprints and contemporary descriptions of the interior." "The plans should give him a good start; they clearly show the ground floor and Blake’s etching and painting studio - referred to as “Blake’s atelier”, looking out onto the back garden and the outside privy. The front ground floor of the building is marked as a printmaking workshop with rolling press." provides an image of the plans.

relates an incident that happened at this house: "One story told by Blake's friend Thomas Butts shows how much the Blakes enjoyed the pastoral surroundings of Lambeth. At the end of Blake's garden was a small summer house, and coming to call on the Blakes one day Butts was shocked to find the couple stark naked: "Come in!" cried Blake; "it's only Adam and Eve you know!" The Blakes were reciting passages from Paradise Lost, apparently "in character.""

have some lovely photos of Blake mosaics in the nearby Carlisle Lane, Virgil Street and Centaur Street railway arches.

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:
William Blake - SE1 - lost plaque

Subjects commemorated i

Blake's house SE1

Blake lived here with his wife, Catherine, throughout the 1790s. The photogra...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

William Blake

Poet and artist. Except for 3 years spent on the coast near Bognor, Blake liv...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
William Blake - SE1 - lost plaque

Also at this site i

William Blake - SE1

William Blake - SE1

The shield with the red crosses is from the Coat of arms of the City of Londo...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Nearby Memorials

Tony Hancock - SW7

Tony Hancock - SW7

SW7, Queen's Gate Place, 20

Unveiled on Hancock's 90th birthday by scriptwriters Galton and Simpson.

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
C. B. Fry - Croydon

C. B. Fry - Croydon

CR0, St James's Road, 144

C. B. Fry, 1872 - 1956, all-round sportsman, was born here. English Heritage

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Charles Dickens - Cranleigh Street

Charles Dickens - Cranleigh Street

NW1, Cranleigh Street, 22, Cranleigh Houses / Brook House

In Dickens' time it was called Johnson Street. His house was number 29 though it had apparently changed to number 13 when the library was...

2 subjects commemorated, 2 creators
Florence Nightingale - South Street

Florence Nightingale - South Street

W1, South Street, 8

London County Council In a house on this site Florence Nightingale, 1820 - 1910, lived and died.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Bond Street

Bond Street

W1, New Bond Street

The "Lord Mayor of the City of Westminster" was present but no name is given.  In Westminster the Mayors change over in May, the month of...

2 subjects commemorated, 4 creators