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Hi Philip
Thanks for that, are there any records pertaining to the shelter? I talked briefly to a woman who entered the building as I was taking the Photo, she hadn't a clue as to it's history, it would have been nice to relate to her the information you have just provided. Although going on her accent I don't somehow think she would have overly impressed to be told that she was living in a homeless womens shelter..hehehe
all the best
Observer
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Just a few that were lost in the great crash, all of Brick Lane.
The Brewery undergoing new building in 1975 (this is where the Vibe Bar is now)
This one including the Frying Pan when it was still a pub, 1989.
And these two showing the street (1990) before it got jazzed up a few years later. Check out the ramshackle shopfronts even then. Oh, those were the days....
Sorry about the quality, photos of photos.
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Hi,
From Gordon Winter's A Cockney Camera:
"A Whitechapel pub in the 1870s. Thomson and Smith did not record the name of the pub where their picture was taken, but mention that though it was in the centre of the Whitechapel Road, it had not entirely lost its rural character: 'There are still tables and benches placed outside, as if to entice Londoners to sit and enjoy country air, though they are no longer planted on the green sward but on the pavement stone'. The man on the right, with a hook on his left arm, lost the hand in an accident at the Whitechapel coal wharves. Before the accident he had earned a comfortable living as a coal porter, but was having difficulty in providing for himself and his mother when the photograph was taken."
Regards,
Mark
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Originally posted by George Hutchinson View PostYou'll obviously know the chap with the hook was known as 'Hooky Alf'.
Actually I didn't know that. I hadn't seen the photograph before I picked up the book second-hand last week. I don't suppose there is any way to tell which pub it was?...
Mark
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