A detail view of part of decorative frieze from the fine Jacobean plaster ceiling in the first-floor north-west room of The Old Palace in Bromley-by-Bow, rescued prior to the demolition of the house in 1894

Date:
1893 - 1894
Location:
Old Palace, St Leonard's Street, Bromley By Bow, Tower Hamlets, Greater London Authority
Reference:
OP18774
Type:
Photograph (Print)
Placeholder image

Image not available

Not what you're looking for? Try a new search

Description

The house that came to be known as 'The Old Palace' in Bromley-by-Bow was built in 1606 as a Jacobean residence. There was a local tradition that it was built as a hunting lodge for King James I, but there is only circumstantial evidence to support this claim. In 1893 the London School Board declared that it planned to demolish the house and build a new school on the site. This prompted a public outcry, led in part by the craftsman CR Ashbee, later founder of the Survey of London. Despite protests, the house was indeed demolished in 1894. However, parts of the house were sold piecemeal prior to demolition, with the State Room, some panelling and an oak doorway now held by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. This example of Jacobean plasterwork is likely also to have been purchased to record and preserve it, although it is unclear if the item is still held in a museum collection. This record photograph was taken by the London Survey Committee, forerunner of the Survey of London.

Content

This is part of the Series: RBO01/81 Early Photographic Print Collection: Tower Hamlets; within the Collection: RBO01 Early Photographic Print Collection

Rights

Source: Historic England Archive

People & Organisations

Photographer: London Survey Committee

Keywords

Decorative Plasterwork, Frieze, Jacobean House