1
Wilson Grove, Bermondsey
Inter-war 'garden city' housing is, perhaps, an unexpected find in this inner-city district. These are some of the 'Salter Cottages', named after Ada Salter who was the first ever woman councillor in Britain in 1910, and was the inspiration behind this development as a replacement for the appalling slums that had previously occupied the area. They were built in 1928.
Image: © Stephen McKay
Taken: 27 Jul 2007
0.02 miles
2
Marigold Street
One of several narrow sidestreets running through the estate beside Cherry Garden Pier.
Image: © Martin Addison
Taken: 22 Oct 2010
0.03 miles
3
Morriss House, Marigold Street, London SE16
It is spelt that way
Image]
Image: © Christine Matthews
Taken: 8 Mar 2015
0.04 miles
4
Name Plaque on Morriss House, Marigold Street, London SE16
Here is a view of the whole apartment block
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Image: © Christine Matthews
Taken: 8 Mar 2015
0.04 miles
5
Marigold Street, London SE16
Image: © Christine Matthews
Taken: 8 Mar 2015
0.04 miles
6
Wilson Grove
A mini-garden city, the houses built in 1928 by Culpin & Bowers.
See also
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Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 26 May 2013
0.04 miles
7
Marigold Street, Bermondsey
The name is an ancient one: genealogy sites record people living here in 1825. The present buildings are much more recent.
Image: © Stephen Craven
Taken: 8 Mar 2015
0.05 miles
8
A200, Jamaica Road
A view of this busy dual carriageway from the junction with Marigold Street close to the, somewhat indistinct, boundary between Bermondsey and Rotherhithe. A Canada Water bound 47 bus, an Alexander bodied Dennis Trident, pauses to collect passengers at the Drummond Road stop. Opposite is a parade of shops with flats above constructed after World War II - much of the area having suffered bombing during the London Blitz.
Image: © Martin Addison
Taken: 22 Oct 2010
0.05 miles
9
Crown pub
At 440 Southwark Park Road. Original was built in 1858 and this one about 1959 with the building of the Slippers Place Estate
Image: © Chris Lordan
Taken: 29 Aug 2007
0.05 miles
10
Bandstand - Southwark Park, Rotherhithe, SE16
Erected in 1998 as an exact replica of the original (melted down for scrap during the Second World War), which was one of a pair designed in 1861 by Captain Francis Fowke for the Royal Horticultural Society in South Kensington. That site is now occupied by the Royal Albert Hall, also designed by Capt Fowke. The pair were bought by the then London County Council, the other being erected in Peckham Rye Park. https://www.dorothearestorations.com/case-studies/congleton-bandstand
Image: © Chris Lordan
Taken: 20 Jan 2008
0.05 miles