East India Dock Wall And Gateway
- Date:
- 4 Jan 2002
- Location:
- East India Dock Wall And Gateway, Leamouth Road E14, Poplar, Tower Hamlets, Greater London
- Reference:
- IOE01/05855/01
- Type:
- Photograph (Digital)
This image was taken as part of the Images of England project. Intended as a photographic record of listed buildings in England at the turn of the century, the project was jointly funded by English Heritage and the Heritage Lottery Fund. Many of the images within the collection were taken by volunteers, and the project ran from 1999 – 2002. For statutory list descriptions, please see the National Heritage List for England (NHLE) on the Historic England website.
The East India Company was founded in 1600 as a joint stock company to trade with the ‘East Indies’ – initially its focus was the spice trade with South East Asia. As the company expanded, it founded trading posts in India, and began trading in commodities including cotton, silk, tea, indigo and opium. The Company built fortified outposts in India to protect its interests, and its growing power in India in the eighteenth century led to it seizing control of the territories of Bengal, Bihar and Orrisa. The Company played a significant role in the expansion of British imperialism in the country, and over the course of the following century the East India Company conquered the entire of the Indian sub-continent. At the peak of its power, it had its own armed forces of circa 260,000 soldiers and was the largest corporation in the world.
During the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, the East India Company trafficked enslaved peoples from Africa to work on plantations in India and Indonesia. The Company officially ended involvement in the trafficking of enslaved peoples in 1834.
By the mid nineteenth century the Company’s high prices and high taxes on the Indian population had led to significant unrest, and the rebellion of 1857 led to the transfer of control of India to the British government. The East India Company was dissolved in 1874. The East India Company leaves a legacy in many place names in England, such as the East India Dock in London. There are also many examples of streets that are named after the Company or after individuals associated with it, or that relate to its activities, such as Nutmeg Lane in London’s Docklands.
(Sources: Wikipedia – East India Company; the National Trust website – What was the East India Company?; Britannica – East India Company; the History of London website – The East India Company).
This is part of the Series: IOE01/0360 Ioe Records Taken By Colin Carron; within the Collection: IOE01 Images Of England
© Mr Colin Carron. Source: Historic England Archive
This photograph was taken for the Images of England project
Photographer: Carron, Colin
Rights Holder: Carron, Colin
Brick, Georgian Gate, Victorian Unassigned, Wall, Monument (By Form), Barrier, Dock, Transport, Water Transport Site, Maritime, Dock And Harbour Installation