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The photo below is entitled simply "A Spitalfields Street"
I have no idea of the date or location - any suggestions gratefully received as to where this was taken
All the photo's are amazing but the "Unknown Spitalfields Street" is fantastic!
The overhanging buildings and twisting road are the types of images that are conjoured up by Dickens!
The photo below is entitled simply "A Spitalfields Street". I have no idea of the date or location - any suggestions gratefully received as to where this was taken
Hi Chris,
That rather distinctive jagged steeple in the distance looks like it might be St Anne's Church, Limehouse.
Edit: As you were - that might be a "ghost" image from another photograph! On the other hand...
The photo below is entitled simply "A Spitalfields Street"
I have no idea of the date or location - any suggestions gratefully received as to where this was taken
An astonishing find, Chris. That has to be the earliest photo ever of Spitalfields. Looks Elizabethan! Brick Lane?
Hi Colin
I can only go by the caption this pic was given
This came from the public, open access photo section of the Ancestry site and you can see the original and its caption at
I just love the photo of the unknown Spitalfields street.
Well done Chris!....top man for finding it for us.
I agree with Mike...it's straight out of a Dickens novel.
It's my favourite photo,although I was quite taken by the one of the mortuary cart earlier.......
But as Stephen suggested, some of those buildings look old enough to be Elizabethan.
The steeple in the background looks rather Gothic !!!
If this photo was even taken in London, I'd guess Westminster, Lambeth, The Borough, or somewhere in The City, such as St. Sepulchre (Smithfield), that was lucky enough to survive The Great Fire.
[ATTACH]2302[/ATTACH]The steeple in the background looks rather Gothic !!!
If this photo was even taken in London, I'd guess Westminster, Lambeth, The Borough, or somewhere in The City...
I'd stick with The City, Colin. Could this be St Dunstan in the East, before it was flattened in the Blitz and reconstructed? If so, that alley would have been somewhere near Great Tower Street, EC3.
Robert,
The street sign appears to be on the wall where you see "Woolf" above the open doorway.It seems to be a long name ...something like Willliamson Street?I think,if I remember rightly,there was an Isaac Woolf in Middlesex Street at the time of JTR who was a rag merchant...
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