1
Gasholder - down
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 24 Apr 2016
0.07 miles
2
Gasholder down
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 14 Jun 2014
0.07 miles
3
Base of an old gasholder
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 13 Oct 2013
0.07 miles
4
Derelict site of a gasworks
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 7 Oct 2017
0.10 miles
5
Edge of Tower Hamlets Cemetery
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 7 Oct 2017
0.11 miles
6
Bow, railway bridge
Carrying the London to Stratford mainline over Cantrell Road, at the southern end of Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park.
Image: © Mike Faherty
Taken: 26 Aug 2012
0.11 miles
7
Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park
This is one of the "Magnificent Seven" London cemeteries (including Highgate and Abney Park) established in the mid-19th Century to solve the crisis in burial spaces. It is in many ways the poor relation of the other six - a result of many factors such as being sited in an area of social deprivation, war time bombing, and the actions of the GLC in 1966/7 who decided to clear the cemetery and turn it into a park. Following local protests and shortage of money the clearance was stopped but not before many buildings and graves had been demolished.
This shot in the south east section of the cemetery shows one of the areas cleared of graves.
The cemetery is now a designated Local Nature Reserve and Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation.
Image: © Trevor Harris
Taken: 27 Feb 2022
0.11 miles
8
A glade in Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park
Tower Hamlets Cemetery was built by the Victorians as a model necropolis in 1841. It was one of "The Magnificent Seven" cemeteries opened around that time to relieve pressure on London's overcrowded churchyards. The other six were Abney Park, Highgate, Kensal Green, Brompton, Norwood and Nunhead. It was consecrated on 4th September 1841, the date that the first interment was made. Tower Hamlets was initially a financial success and by 1889 some 250,000 bodies had been buried, the vast majority in common graves. Over the next 75 years the cemetery faced the same problem as many other Victorian cemeteries of increasing cost of maintenance coupled with reduced income from burials.
By the time burials at Tower Hamlets ceased in 1966, when it was purchased by the Greater London Council, Ian Nairn was able to describe "Row after row of East Enders, jammed together....Around them, trees and shrubs as thick as the undergrowth in Epping Forest....stuffed to the gills with the remains of cockney mums and dads. ..the whole place could be in Cambodia or Yucatan."
This is the only sizeable, established woodland in the Borough of Tower Hamlets. Over the last 25 years it has been developed as a cemetery park and now makes a fine nature reserve which is popular with local people.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 26 Feb 2014
0.11 miles
9
View from the railway line
Image: © N Chadwick
Taken: 13 Oct 2013
0.11 miles
10
Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park
Tower Hamlets Cemetery was built by the Victorians as a model necropolis in 1841. It was one of "The Magnificent Seven" cemeteries opened around that time to relieve pressure on London's overcrowded churchyards. The other six were Abney Park, Highgate, Kensal Green, Brompton, Norwood and Nunhead. It was consecrated on 4th September 1841, the date that the first interment was made. Tower Hamlets was initially a financial success and by 1889 some 250,000 bodies had been buried, the vast majority in common graves. Over the next 75 years the cemetery faced the same problem as many other Victorian cemeteries of increasing cost of maintenance coupled with reduced income from burials.
By the time burials at Tower Hamlets ceased in 1966, when it was purchased by the Greater London Council, Ian Nairn was able to describe "Row after row of East Enders, jammed together....Around them, trees and shrubs as thick as the undergrowth in Epping Forest....stuffed to the gills with the remains of cockney mums and dads. ..the whole place could be in Cambodia or Yucatan."
This is the only sizeable, established woodland in the Borough of Tower Hamlets. Over the last 25 years it has been developed as a cemetery park and now makes a fine nature reserve which is popular with local people.
Image: © Marathon
Taken: 26 Feb 2014
0.13 miles