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Building   

Fruiterers Hall & warehouses

Categories: Property

Building

In 1754 the Fruiterers had warehouses at the “Three Cranes”, situated in a lane called Fruiterers’ Alley, running off Thames Street. The Company’s meeting place or hall at that time was the Fruiterers’ Hall in Worcester House, Thames Street.

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Fruiterers Hall & warehouses

Commemorated ati

Fruiterers' Hall & Alley

{To the left of the Fruiterers Company crest:} On 19th January 2000 the Rt Ho...

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Other Subjects

Myddelton House

Myddelton House

This site was previously occupied by an Elizabethan red-brick building known as Bowling Green House. In 1613 Hugh Myddelton, constructed the New River, the course of which bisected the land around ...

Building, Property

1 memorial
Ted Christmas

Ted Christmas

Builder. Born Edward Charles Christmas in Lewisham. He set up his business around 1890, initially building large detached houses, and then less expensive ones in the Perry Vale area, where his styl...

Person, Property

1 memorial
Mulalley & Co Ltd

Mulalley & Co Ltd

Building firm set up by the O'Malley family in 1972, based in Woodford Green.

Group, Property

1 memorial
McHawk

McHawk

Active 1989. Possibly a property company based in Birmingham; a private limited company incorporated 10 January 1986.  Dissolved 16 January 2016. And/or MoHawk Limited, created 13 January 1988. A...

Group, Property

1 memorial
Frederick Abraham Kerven

Frederick Abraham Kerven

Along with C. J. Kerven (his brother?), owner of Derwentwater House. They gave the Radcliffe Obelisk to Acton Council and funded its erection in Acton Park in January 1904. The house was demolished...

Person, Benefactor, Property

1 memorial