Monday, March 18, 2013
Green Dragons, Black Lions, Red Lions
Green Dragon Yard reads like something from a fantasy work
by Lord Dunsany. But such a yard exists in London. Green Dragon Yard, like Kings
Arms Court, and the now demolished Black Lion Yard, owes its name to the various
inns that stood along the road eastwards from London , running directly from
Aldgate High Street to Whitechapel High Street and then Whitechapel Road and
Mile End Road. These inns stood outside the city walls and the yards and courts
run north to join Old Montague Street.
The Black Lion Inn is mentioned in Dickens’ Barnaby Rudge in
1840 , it had been there from at least 1746. Later Black Lion Yard became a
centre for jewellers and became known as the Hatton Garden of the East End. At
that time of the 21 shops in the yard, twelve were jewellers. Every Jewish young
woman about to marry went there with their mothers to buy Sabbath candles. Despite
petitions to save it, it was demolished between 1972 and 1975. The horrible
concrete building, Black Lion House, with Habibson’s Bank at ground level, now
stands on its site at Whitechapel Road. Strangely perhaps, the Red Lion pub
stood at 2a Black Lion Yard and was there from at least 1831 to the 1890s.
If you walk eastwards from there you will see an arched
doorway that is the entrance to Green Dragon Yard. Unfortunately, where one you
were able to walk through from Whitechapel road to Old Montague street,
property developers have one again conducted a land grab and stopped up what
was once a public thoroughfare at both ends. There is no street sign at the
Whitechapel Road end and the only indication that this is the entry to Green Dragon
Yard is a sign on the intercom next to the gate. The Yard is still listed in
the A-Z.
What now appears to be a gated byway for the relatively well
-off once was the home of the impoverished working class. Writing about this in his book The Battle with
The Slum (1902) Jacob A.Riis says:
“I photographed Green Dragon Yard as typical of what I saw
about me. Compare the court and the yard and see the difference between our
slum problem and that of Old World cities…The population of Green Dragon Yard was greater than the sight of it would
lead you to expect, for in Whitechapel one-room flats were the rule”.
Phyllis Etchells in her memories
of living in the East End recalls:
“Green Dragon Yard-1906
By the time my sister was about 2 years old we had moved to a two
roomed house in Green Dragon Yard. ..
The interesting thing about Green Dragon Yard was that it was a quiet
street between two busy thoroughfares.
The square at the entrance to the street was
obviously where the coach and horses turned to arrive at the old inn.
At the Whitechapel Road end of the yard there was a very narrow
entrance to
the main thoroughfare. At that entrance there was a
bollard - no doubt to
stop men with barrows from using it as a short cut.
.....There was great poverty
in Green Dragon Yard.
Green Dragon Yard
was a taste of Victorian England. The
houses had
wooden shutters at the windows.....It was a sheltered and happy place
to
play. However, there was another more exciting life
to be seen when you
went through the narrow
alleyway on to the Whitechapel Road. Suddenly
you were in a very bright, noisy and busy thoroughfare."
You can read in more detail about her memories of the East End here:
Labels: Black Lion Yard, East End, East London, Green Dragon Yard, Jacob A. Riis, Kings Arms Court
Comments:
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Great campaign. Am sceptical of its outcome. Middle Class and property values are the arbiter. But not in the long term.
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