London in Quotations: Lieutenant Colonel Charles Rathbone

Having a lovely time. Stop. If I ever find you in London, I will break your neck. Stop.

Lieutenant Colonel Charles Rathbone, Telegram sent to brutal Schweidnitz POW camp commander, Karl Niemeyer, after Rathbone’s 150 mile escape through Germany into Holland, 1918

London Trivia: Reach for the sky

On 16 March 2009, the construction of the London Bridge Tower started, designed by Renzo Piano at 1,017ft it was destined to be the tallest inhabited building in Western Europe and needed foundations over 173 feet deep. It was soon dubbed ‘The Shard’ a name the developers would later adopt. Its 72 floors were topped out on 30 March 2012 and inaugurated on 6 July 2012. On 1 February 2013, the observation deck opened.

On 16 March 1872 the First ever FA Cup Final was played at The Oval between Wanderers (1) and Royal Engineers (0)

Insulting the King’s Bard still carries a fine of six cows and 8d (3p), although no-one is quite sure who, precisely, is the King’s Bard

The glazed-iron roof of Royal Albert Hall measures 20,000sq.ft. and was at the time of building the largest unsupported dome in the world

The proprietor of Whiteley’s original store in Queensway was murdered by an illegitimate son whom he wished to disown

Old Waterloo Bridge, a tempory structure, was transported by train to Germany in 1944 and rebuilt to span the Rhine. After the war it vanished without trace

Museums which record Londoners: Carlyle; Churchill; Dickens; Faraday; Johnson; Freud; Handel; Hogarth; Keats; Leighton; Morris; Nightingale

Harrod’s has more than 200 departments spread over 20 acres of floorspace, with an artesian well and a underground lock-up for shoplifters

The museum at Lord’s Long Room has a perfume jar containing the original Ashes, and a stuffed sparrow bowled out in 1936 by Jehangir Khan

On 16 March 1912, the last 4-horse team pulling an open bus ran from the foot of Balham Hill to Gracechurch Street

The Bank of England Chief Cashire’s signature have appeared on banknotes since 1870 but the Monarch’s portrait did not feature until 1960

Once granted The Freedom of the City of London you can herd sheep over London Bridge, carry a drawn sword and not get arrested when drunk

CabbieBlog-cab.gifTrivial Matter: London in 140 characters is taken from the daily Twitter feed @cabbieblog.
A guide to the symbols used here and source material can be found on the Trivial Matter page.

Previously Posted: A match made in Hell

For those new to CabbieBlog or readers who are slightly forgetful, on Saturdays I’m republishing posts, many going back over a decade. Some will still be very relevant while others have become dated over time. Just think of this post as your weekend paper supplement.

A match made in Hell (23.03.12)

On Fairfield Road, Bow stands the Bryant & May match factory, which in the 1980s became one of the first industrial buildings in London to be converted into apartments when it was renamed the Bow Quarter.

In the summer of 1888 what happened in this building became a pivotal moment in the history of the labour movement.

The match girls working there were regarded as the lowest strata of society; long hours in appalling conditions, were hired and fired at the will of the management, and its workers suffering dreadful industrial injuries.

Bryant & May were regarded at the time as a model employer, much the same as the Cadburys, a similar Quaker employer who built for their workers the Bourneville village.

The Bryant & May strike started when a Fabian journalist Annie Besant after having interviewed some of the match girls wrote a scathing article about their life working in the factory. Entitled ‘White Slavery in London’ Besant highlighted that shareholders’ dividends of 20 per cent were achieved only by cutting their meagre wages lower than 15 years previously.

The youngest of the women were so malnourished they still looked like children; the factory foreman would beat employees; and if they succumbed to an industrial injury they were sacked.

Far worse than those conditions was phossy jaw where toxic particles from white phosphorous used in the match heads entered the worker’s jawbones through the holes in their teeth.

Initially causing facial swelling eventually the jaw would decay with pieces of bone working through the suppurating abscesses. In the final stages, like lepers, they would live outside London as the smell from their decaying jaw became intolerable, before they succumbed to an agonising death.

Besant’s article shocked the Nation and prompted the match girls to strike – the first of its kind in the country – it sowed the seeds for the establishment of the modern Labour Party and women’s rights when employed.

Questions were raised in the House by MPs. the Times published editorials shaming the previously unblemished reputation of Bryant & May, and socialite George Bernard Shaw among others voiced his support for them. The match girls even received death threats from someone claiming to be Jack the Ripper, whose reign of fear started some weeks later in East London.

Within two weeks their demands had been met and they returned to work, but it would be a century later before Bryant & May would acknowledge any wrongdoing on their part.

Just a year after the match girl’s victory thousands of the country’s most exploited workers would gain union recognition, the most famous being after the Dock Strike which began at a short walk from Bryant & May’s factory in East London.

Next year marks the 125th anniversary of the strike which became a pivotal point in the trade union movement and employees’ working conditions. As Louise Raw remarked when interviewed on the Robert Elms show recently, now is the time to unveil a Blue Plaque alongside the one dedicated to Annie Besant, to those brave and exploited girls who had the temerity to take on a powerful employer – and win.

London in Quotations: Alan Parker

I’m always afraid someone’s going to tap me on the shoulder one day and say, ‘Back to North London’.

Alan Parker (1944-2020)

London Trivia: Miscarriage of justice

On 9 March 1950 Timothy Evans (25) was hanged at Pentonville Prison for the murder of his wife, Beryl at 10 Rillington Place. Mentally sub-normal he had, under duress, admitted to the killing, when in fact John Christie had murdered her along with many others. Evans was granted a posthumous pardon in 1966 and Christie was hanged for the crimes on 15 July 1953 by the same executioner who had previously hanged Evans.

On 9 March 1721 English Chancellor Exchequer John Aislabie confined in London Tower for ‘most notorious, dangerous and infamous corruption’ relating to the South Sea Bubble scandal

On 9 March 1966, Ronnie Kray walked into the Blind Beggar public house on Whitechapel Road and shot rival gangster George Cornell through the head

Queen Square, Bloomsbury takes its name from the statute at its centre but no-one knows the sculptor or which queen it is meant to represent

With no flowers Green Park is so named because it was once the burial ground for the leper’s hospital on the site of St. James’s Palace

Jewry Street was originally called Poor Jewry to distinguish the local Jewish community from the richer one round the corner at Old Jewry

Berkeley Square resident The Rt Hon John Theodore Cuthbert Moore-Brabazon was Britain’s first owner of a car painted with metallic paint

The 4th Earl of Sandwich is credited with inventing the snack bearing his name to assist him staying at the gambling tables of White’s Club

Dating from 1879 Fulham Football Club is the oldest professional football club in London, starting out as Fulham St. Andrew’s Church Sunday School F.C.

In 1952 the Reliant Regal the forerunner to Del Boy’s Robin, was banned from the Motor Show as with three wheels it wasn’t regarded as a car

At the end of the 19th century there were 250-300,000 working horses in the capital each producing between 3 and 4 tons of dung a year

Several eminent Victorian engineers favoured a scheme to dam the Thames at Woolwich, thereby producing a vast inner city freshwater lake

CabbieBlog-cab.gifTrivial Matter: London in 140 characters is taken from the daily Twitter feed @cabbieblog.
A guide to the symbols used here and source material can be found on the Trivial Matter page.