Pennyfields, E14

Road in/near Poplar, existing between 1650 and now

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(51.50952 -0.02376, 51.509 -0.023) 
MAP YEAR:18001810182018301860190019502024 
 
Road · * · E14 ·
JANUARY
1
2000
Pennyfields is the western extension of Poplar High Street.

Pennyfields, characterised by its modest housing and shops, served as a buffer zone between the relatively shabby respectability of the High Street and the intriguing Oriental underworld of Limehouse Causeway to the west. During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Pennyfields represented a peculiar blend of these two societies. However, in the inter-war years, the street transformed into the heart of the Chinese East End. Unfortunately, all the buildings associated with its colourful history have been demolished, making way for public housing in the 1960s.

The origins of Pennyfields are shrouded in obscurity, intertwined with the complex landholdings of the Stepney Manor. Some properties in the area retained manorial tenure well into the 20th century. There is little evidence of substantial development before 1650, although a map from around 1573 suggests that Pennyfields was an undeveloped pathway connecting the established streets of Limehouse Causeway and Poplar High Street. In 1652, Abraham Chambers, a goldsmith from the City, acquired property in the Stepney Manor, which included six cottages and adjoining land spanning 16 acres known as Penny Field. By 1669, Abraham’s son, also named Abraham, was granted ownership of the same property, which had grown to encompass "43 tenements and 27 cottages in or near Pennyfield in Poplar" along with the original 16 acres of land. The significant increase in the number of properties indicates that the street was developed during the 1650s and 1660s. Some of the cottages were constructed with three rooms stacked on top of each other. While the architectural style may have differed, the density of buildings in that era was comparable to the Pennyfields of 1868, which boasted 77 properties. The 16-acre plot known as "Penny Field" persisted at least until the 1770s when it was owned by a man named William Hitch, who possessed a house and the 16-acre tract of land.

During the 19th century, the residents of Pennyfields generally had lower prosperity compared to those living in Poplar High Street. In 1851, more than half of the houses in Pennyfields were occupied by multiple families, and some properties, particularly lodging houses, accommodated even more resident families. While the social status of the inhabitants had always been modest, the 1851 census suggests that Pennyfields had experienced more prosperous times in the past. In that year, 21 households still employed domestic servants, but by 1881, only six households could afford to do so. As the century progressed, the number of professional residents declined. In the mid-19th century, middle-class residents included William Henry, a surgeon who had studied under Robert Lister, residing at No. 2, a dentist at No. 57, two chemists and druggists at a Medical Hall at No. 1, and the owners of two small boarding schools at Nos. 24 and 41.

Amidst the small two-story brick houses of 19th-century Pennyfields, a few architectural remnants reflected a more prosperous past. Several substantial properties from the early to mid-18th century survived until the 1960s.

Between 1851 and 1881, the character of Pennyfields underwent little change. It remained a combination of run-down residential and retail properties, with some light manufacturing activities. For example, from 1833 to 1869, there was a brass foundry at No. 44, and in 1881, there was a tent manufacturer at No. 55, a leather currier at No. 37, and at No. 76, Jacheus Poulson and his son, who were writers, painters, and gilders. General shops were interspersed among the residential properties, with many of the shop fronts being established between 1840 and 1860. By 1881, a small cluster of shops existed from No. 52 to No. 68 (even).

In 1851, several Irish inhabitants, primarily labourers and dock workers, were recorded in Pennyfields. By 1881, the number of Irish residents had increased to 37 out of a total population of 622, and they were joined by 23 individuals of German and Scandinavian origin. The Germans were mainly employed in trades such as tailoring, shoemaking, and baking. A Scandinavian Reading Room was established at No. 33 from the early 20th century until 1930. Thus, even before the arrival of the Chinese community, Pennyfields was starting to acquire a cosmopolitan atmosphere.

By 1888, Pennyfields had a highly diverse character. The north side of the street included at least five households classified as middle-class, which encompassed the Commercial Tavern at No. 1, the Rose and Crown at No. 17, and three small shops at Nos. 33-37. On the other hand, the south side was poorer, housing several destitute laborers, a few well-visited brothels, and a lodging house at No. 62 where 20 children resided. A cat’s meat shop, a type of butcher shop selling horseflesh (one of several in the street), could be found at No. 70. The street was described as miserable and impoverished. Ten years later, little had changed except for an increase in the number of lodgings for foreign seamen on the south side. Architecturally, it remained a row of irregularly built houses and small shops, with rooms being rented out above them.

One of the poorest areas in Pennyfields was a small blind courtyard called Silver Lion Court, situated behind the Silver Lion public house at No. 65. The Silver Lion had been present on the site since at least 1750, while the court itself was built around 1800. It consisted of 14 two-story brick houses arranged back-to-back, with narrow frontages of 13 feet. However, by 1862, the Medical Officer of Health reported to the Poplar Board of Guardians that 113 people were living in filth and squalor on a space of just 105 feet by 30 feet. The court became predominantly inhabited by Irish residents in the 1880s and had already been closed once by the sanitary authorities. In 1882, a local resident complained about the "low and filthy class of people occupying the houses therein."

Silver Lion Court was condemned by the Borough Medical Officer of Health in 1919 when it housed 12 houses with a population of 45 people. In 1933, it was officially designated as a Clearance Area, and the Borough Medical Officer declared that none of the seven houses was suitable for human habitation. The houses were described as dark, damp, worn-out and dilapidated, accessed through a narrow court. All the houses had been cleared by 1937.

From the 1890s onwards, the Chinese community in the East End began to grow in size and expand eastwards from Limehouse Causeway into Pennyfields. This area catered to Lascar, Chinese, and Japanese sailors working on Oriental routes into the Port of London. The main attractions for these sailors were the opium dens hidden behind shops in Limehouse and Poplar, as well as the presence of prostitutes, Chinese grocers, restaurants, and seamen’s lodging houses. Racial segregation and language barriers contributed to the concentration of Chinese residents in Pennyfields, as they faced hostility from British sailors and many struggled with English. Over time, the drab shops of Pennyfields transformed into Chinese emporiums, with colourful interiors that provided an exotic contrast to the otherwise grey streets of Poplar. These Chinese shops were described as quaint, with walls decorated in red and orange papers adorned with Chinese writing indicating the style or name of the business, along with maps of China and hanging Chinese almanacs.

During the late 19th century and early 20th century, Pennyfields developed a reputation that attracted the attention of the literary and artistic circles of fin-de-siècle London. The intoxicating aromas of burning opium, joss-sticks, and tobacco from hubble-bubble pipes created an atmosphere that fascinated the West End society. Parties from the West End would venture to Pennyfields at night, expecting to find something exotic and morally decadent. However, they often discovered that the reality of Pennyfields was far more ordinary than the legends suggested. Nonetheless, Pennyfields had a distinct character that set it apart from the rest of Poplar.

By 1918, there were 182 Chinese residents living in Pennyfields, all of whom were men, with nine of them having English wives. During the 1930s, Chinatown, which encompassed Pennyfields and Limehouse Causeway, reached its peak size with a population of 5000, many of whom were sailors. Some Chinese individuals continued to reside in Pennyfields until the street’s demolition after 1960. In the 1920s, it was noted that many of the houses occupied by the Chinese community were very old and externally dilapidated.

In September 1933, the Poplar Borough Council identified a small section of Pennyfields as a clearance area, specifically houses numbered 71 to 77 (odd). By 1937, all the houses in question had been cleared and demolished.

During the Second World War, some properties in Pennyfields suffered bomb damage. However, even before the war, much of the street had already fallen into decay, with many houses in a state of disrepair. In the 1950s and 1960s, both sides of the street were compulsorily purchased by the London County Council, except for the Rose and Crown public house on the north side, which was rebuilt in the 1950s and remains standing.

Subsequently, all the other properties on Pennyfields were demolished in the 1960s to make way for the construction of the Birchfield Estate.

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Main source: Survey of London | British History Online
Further citations and sources



NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
Museum of London Docklands The Museum of London Docklands, based in an 1802 warehouse, tells the history of London’s River Thames and the growth of the Docklands.
Railway Tavern The Railway Tavern was generally known as Charlie Brown’s.
St Matthias Old Church St Matthias Old Church is the modern name given to the Poplar Chapel built by the East India Company in 1654.
Tower Hamlets College Tower Hamlets College is a large further education and a constituent college of New City College.
West India Quay West India Quay is a leisure complex on the Isle of Dogs.

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Andersens Wharf, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Limehouse)
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Annabel Street, E14 Annabel Street was replaced by a school (Poplar)
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Arno Place, E14 Arno Place was redeveloped post-war (Westferry)
Astoria Way, E14 Astoria Way is a location in London (Poplar)
Bate Street, E14 Batson Street (Bate Street) was situated off Three Colt Street (Limehouse)
Beccles Street, E14 Beccles Street was previously called Jamaica Place (Limehouse)
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Berber Place, E14 Berber Place is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Berkeley Tower, E14 Berkeley Tower is a building on Westferry Circus (Canary Wharf)
Bethlehem House, E14 Bethlehem House is a block on Limehouse Causeway (Westferry)
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Birchfield Street, E14 Birchfield Street was once called Drill Place (Poplar)
Birkdale House, E14 Birkdale House is located on St Anne’s Row (Limehouse)
Blomfield House, E14 Blomfield House is a block on Hale Street (Poplar)
Boardwalk, E14 Sophia Street was built in 1823 and demolished in 1939 (Poplar)
Bogart Court, E14 Bogart Court is a block on Limehouse Link (Westferry)
Boston Lodge, E14 Boston Lodge is a residential block, part of a line of blocks facing New Festival Avenue (Poplar)
Brewster House, E14 Brewster House is a building on Barleycorn Way (Westferry)
Bygrove Street, E14 Bygrove Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Canary Riverside, E14 Canary Riverside is a road in the E14 postcode area (Canary Wharf)
Cannon Drive, E14 Cannon Drive connects Hertsmere Road with the Cannon Workshops (Westferry)
Cannon House, E14 Cannon House is sited on Hertsmere Road West (Westferry)
Cannon Workshops, E14 Cannon Workshops is a block dating to the beginning of the 19th century (Westferry)
Canoe Walk, E14 Canoe Walk is a location in London (Limehouse)
Canton Street, E14 Canton Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Carnell Apartments, E14 Carnell Apartments is a block on St Anne Street (Poplar)
Casson Apartments, E14 Casson Apartments is a block on Upper North Street (Poplar)
Castor Lane, E14 Castor Lane is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Castor Street, E14 Castor Street existed between the 1810s and 1960s (Poplar)
Chancellor Passage, E14 Chancellor Passage is in the Canary Wharf area behind West India Quay (Canary Wharf)
Charles Street, EC1Y Charles Street - one of many streets of this name in London - was renamed Viscount Street in 1939 (Poplar)
Charlesworth House, E14 Charlesworth House is a building on Dod Street (Poplar)
Cheadle House, E14 Cheadle House is a block on Copenhagen Place (Limehouse)
Chilcot Close, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Chusan Place, E14 Chusan Place was described by Charles Booth as "one of the blackest spots in London" (Poplar)
Colborne House, E14 Colborne House is a block on Nankin Street (Poplar)
Columbus Courtyard, E14 Columbus Courtyard is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Canary Wharf)
Conant House, E14 Conant House is a block on Pelling Street (Poplar)
Corry House, E14 Corry House is a block on Shirbutt Street (Poplar)
Creek House, E14 Creek House can be found on Narrow Street (Westferry)
Cross Street, E14 Cross Street was given the name Bungay Street in 1912 (Westferry)
Crossrail Place, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Canary Wharf)
Cruse House, E14 Cruse House is located on Poplar High Street (Poplar)
Devitt House, E14 Devitt House is a block on Wade’s Place (Poplar)
Dingle Gardens, E14 Dingle Gardens is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
Dockmasters House, E14 Dockmasters House is a block on Hertsmere Road (Westferry)
Dolphin Lane, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Duff Street, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Duke Of York House, E14 Duke Of York House is a block on East India Dock Road (Poplar)
Dundee Court, E14 Dundee Court is a block on Milligan Street (Westferry)
Dundee Wharf, E14 Dundee Wharf is a road in the E14 postcode area (Westferry)
Eaton House, E14 Eaton House can be found on Westferry Circus (Westferry)
Edgemere House, E14 Edgemere House is a block on St Anne Street (Poplar)
Edward Mills Way, E14 Edward Mills Way leads north from Canton Street (Poplar)
Eldersfield House, E14 Eldersfield House is sited on Pennyfields (Poplar)
Elite House, E14 Elite House is located on St Anne Street (Limehouse)
Elizabeth Close, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Elland House, E14 Elland House is a block on Copenhagen Place (Limehouse)
Emmett Street, E14 Emmett Street originated in the early 19th century (Westferry)
Epstein Square, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Evans Street, E14 Brothers Oliver and George Evan Evans laid out a street called Evans Street - construction continued until the mid-1850s (Poplar)
Farrance Street, E14 Farrance Street is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
Fishermans Place, E14 Fishermans Place is a road in the W4 postcode area (Canary Wharf)
Fishermans Walk, E14 Fishermans Walk is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Canary Wharf)
Flora Close, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Flynn Court, E14 Flynn Court is a block on Garford Street (Westferry)
Fonda Court, E14 Fonda Court is a building on Premiere Place (Westferry)
Fore Street, E14 Fore Street was a previous name for the eastern end of Narrow Street. (Westferry)
Garford Street, E14 Garford Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Westferry)
Garland Court, E14 Garland Court is located on Limehouse Link (Westferry)
Gates Street, E14 Gates Street (later Canton Street) was laid out in 1846 by James Gates on his land north of the Evans brothers’ property (Poplar)
Gill Place, E14 Gill Place was located off Jamaica Place (Limehouse)
Gill Street, E14 Gill Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Limehouse)
Gladstone House, E14 Gladstone House is a residential block (Poplar)
Gloster Ridley Court, E14 Gloster Ridley Court is a block on St Anne’s Row (Poplar)
Gorsefield House, E14 Gorsefield House is sited on East India Dock Road (Poplar)
Gough Street, E14 Gough Street was originally laid out as Thomas Street (Poplar)
Gough Walk, E14 Gough Walk is a walkway which follows the former route of a street called Gough Street (Poplar)
Granville House, E14 Granville House is a residential block (Poplar)
Grenada House, E14 Grenada House is a block on Limehouse Causeway (Westferry)
Grenade Street, E14 Grenade Street is a road in the E14 postcode area (Westferry)
Grundy Street, E14 Grundy Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Hale Street, E14 Hale Street is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
Harbour Way, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Heckford House, E14 Heckford House is a block on Grundy Street (Poplar)
Hertsmere Road, E14 Hertsmere Road - a 1980s-era road - curves around the back of the Museum of London Docklands (Westferry)
Hind Grove, E14 Hind Grove replaced Hind Street as part of a new development in the 1950s (Poplar)
Hind Street, E14 Hind Street was laid out in 1848-1849 along with Thomas Street on the Horne/Hind estate (Poplar)
Hopkins House, E14 Hopkins House is located on Canton Street (Poplar)
Horizon Building, E14 The Horizon Building (Canary Wharf)
Inigo Jones House, E14 Inigo Jones House is a block on Gill Street (Limehouse)
Jamaica Street, E14 Jamaica Street was also known as Jamaica Place (Limehouse)
Jeremiah House, E14 Jeremiah House is sited on Jeremiah Street (Poplar)
Jeremiah Street, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Joseph Irwin House, E14 Joseph Irwin House is a block on Gill Street (Limehouse)
Kelly Court, E14 Kelly Court is located on Garford Street (Westferry)
Kemps Drive, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Kerensky House, E14 Kerensky House is a block on Upper North Street (Poplar)
Keymer Place, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Kildare Walk, E14 Kildare Walk is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
King Street, E14 King Street was renamed Ming Street in 1938 in reference to the local Chinese community (Poplar)
Knot Court, E14 Knot Court is a block on Copenhagen Place (Limehouse)
Langan House, E14 Langan House is a building on Keymer Place (Limehouse)
Ledger Building, E14 Ledger Building is a block on Hertsmere Road (Westferry)
Leybourne House, E14 Leybourne House is a building on Farrance Street (Poplar)
Leyland House, E14 Leyland House is a block on Hale Street (Poplar)
Limehouse Causeway, E14 Limehouse Causeway was home to the original Chinatown of London. (Westferry)
Limekiln Hill, E14 Limekiln Hill was the former name for a section of Three Colt Street (Westferry)
Lucienne Court, E14 Lucienne Court is a block on Lindfield Street (Poplar)
Mackrow Walk, E14 Mackrow Walk is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Malam Gardens, E14 Malam Gardens is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Mary Jones Court, E14 Mary Jones Court is a block on Garford Street (Westferry)
Meridian House, E14 Meridian House is a block on Poplar High Street (Poplar)
Milligan Street, E14 Milligan Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Westferry)
Ming Street, E14 Ming Street - the former King Street - was renamed in recognition of the then local Chinese community (Poplar)
Morant Street, E14 Morant Street is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
Moro Apartments, E14 Moro Apartments is a block on Edward Mills Way (Poplar)
Nankin Street, E14 Around 1858, Nankin Street (and nearby Pekin Street) was developed by Stephen Redman and other owners of adjacent land (Poplar)
Navis House, E14 Navis House is a block on Lindfield Street (Poplar)
New Festival Avenue, E14 New Festival Avenue is a walkway serving a number of new builds (Poplar)
Newell Street, E14 Newell Street commemorates James Edgar Newell, Stepney borough councillor 1903-30. (Limehouse)
North Quay, E14 The North Quay development - approximately 3.28 hectares - was previously used as a construction laydown area for the Canary Wharf Elizabeth line station (Canary Wharf)
North Quay-Blood Alley, E14 This part of North Quay was known as Blood Alley when this was a docklands area (Canary Wharf)
Northcote House, E14 Northcote House is a building on Saracen Street (Poplar)
Oast Court, E14 Oast Court is a block on Newell Street (Limehouse)
Odell House, E14 Odell House is a block on Edward Mills Way (Poplar)
Ontario Way, E14 Ontario Way is a road in the E14 postcode area (Canary Wharf)
Overstone House, E14 Overstone House is a block on East India Dock Road (Poplar)
Padstow House, E14 Padstow House is a block on Three Colt Street (Westferry)
Park Place, E14 Park Place ran south from Limehouse Causeway (Westferry)
Pasmore Court, E14 Pasmore Court is a block on Canton Street (Poplar)
Pekin Close, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Pekin Street, E14 Pekin Street, along with other Chinese-themed streetnames locally, began life in 1858 (Poplar)
Pennyfields, E14 Pennyfields is the western extension of Poplar High Street (Poplar)
Pigott Street, E14 When the Lansbury Estate was built, Pigott Street was the final part of the plan, hosting a block of flats from 1982 (Poplar)
Pinefield Close, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Playfair House, E14 Playfair House is a block on Nankin Street (Poplar)
Plimsoll Close, E14 Plimsoll Close is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
Poplar High Street, E14 Until the late nineteenth century Poplar High Street was the district’s principal street. (Poplar)
Premiere Place, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Westferry)
Providence Cottages, E14 Providence Cottages were situated off Emmett Street (Westferry)
Providence House, E14 Providence House is a block on Three Colt Street (Limehouse)
Pusey House, E14 Pusey House is located on Saracen Street (Poplar)
Railway Arches, E14 Railway Arches is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Westferry)
Ricardo Street, E14 Ricardo Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Rich Street, E14 Rich Street is a road in the E14 postcode area (Westferry)
Rigden Street, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Roche House, E14 Roche House was built by Stepney Borough Council in 1939, containing 100 flats (Westferry)
Rogers Court, E14 Rogers Court is a block on Limehouse Link (Westferry)
Rook Street, E14 Rook Street - at first called Mary Street - ran between Poplar High Street and East India Road (Poplar)
Rope Court, E14 Rope Court is a block on Canoe Walk (Limehouse)
Rosefield Gardens, E14 Rosefield Gardens is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
Russell House, E14 Russell House is a block on Saracen Street (Poplar)
Salter Street, E14 Salter Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Westferry)
Saltwell Street, E14 Saltwell Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Saracen Street, E14 Saracen Street was a new street formed when the Lansbury Estate was built (Poplar)
Sarah Perry House, E14 Sarah Perry House is a block on Flora Close (Poplar)
Saunders Close, E14 Saunders Close is a road in the E14 postcode area (Westferry)
Scott Russell Place, E14 Scott Russell Place is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Shepherd Court, E14 Shepherd Court can be found on Annabel Close (Poplar)
Shirbutt Street, E14 Shirbutt Street is a road in the E14 postcode area (Poplar)
Slate House, E14 Slate House is a block on Keymer Place (Limehouse)
Spearman House, E14 Spearman House is a block on Nankin Street (Poplar)
St Annes Row, E14 St Annes Row is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
St Anne’s Street, E14 St Anne Street is a street of Poplar (Poplar)
Stocks Place, E14 Stocks Place is a road in the E14 postcode area (Westferry)
Stoneyard Lane, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Storehouse Mews, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Westferry)
String Court, E14 String Court is a block on Copenhagen Place (Limehouse)
Sturry Street, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Poplar)
Swale Street, E14 Swale Street was redeveloped in 1954 and became part of Nankin Street (Poplar)
Taylor House, E14 Taylor House is a block on Stonehouse Mews (Westferry)
Tenbury Place, E14 Tenbury Place was situated off Jamaica Place (Westferry)
The Mitre, E14 The Mitre is a road in the E14 postcode area (Limehouse)
The Port East Building, E14 The Port East Building is a block on Hertsmere Road (Canary Wharf)
The Warehouse, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Canary Wharf)
Thompson House, E14 Thompson House is a block on Pekin Street (Poplar)
Thornfield House, E14 Thornfield House is a block on Rosefield Gardens (Poplar)
Three Colt Street, E14 Three Colt Street was first recorded in 1362 making it one of Limehouse’s oldest streets (Limehouse)
Tivoli Mews, E14 A street within the E14 postcode (Limehouse)
Trinidad Street, E14 Trinidad Street is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Westferry)
Turner’s Buildings, E14 Turner’s Buildings was a small close off Pennyfields (Poplar)
Ulmar Place, E14 Ulmar Place was a small turning off King Street (Poplar)
Upper North Street, E14 The story of Upper North Street is closely tied to the development of the East India Dock Road between 1806 and 1810 (Poplar)
Vale House, E14 Vale House is a building on St Anne Street (Poplar)
Wades Place, E14 Wades Place is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
Welles Court, E14 Welles Court is a block on Limehouse Link (Westferry)
Wessex House, E14 Wessex House is a block on St Anne’s Row (Poplar)
West India Avenue, E14 West India Avenue is a road in the E14 postcode area (Canary Wharf)
West India Dock Road, E14 West India Dock Road is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Poplar)
West India House, E14 West India House is sited on West India Dock Road (Poplar)
Westcott House, E14 Westcott House is sited on East India Dock Road (Poplar)
Westferry Circus, E14 Westferry Circus is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Canary Wharf)
Westferry Studios, E14 Westferry Studios is one of the streets of London in the E14 postal area (Westferry)
Wigram House, E14 Wigram House is located on Wade’s Place (Poplar)
William Booth House, E14 William Booth House is a block on Hind Grove (Poplar)
Willis House, E14 Willis House is a block on Poplar High Street (Poplar)
Winchester House, E14 Winchester House is a block on Edward Mills Way (Poplar)
Wren Landing, E14 Wren Landing is an open area between Cabot Square and the footbridge over to the Museum of London Docklands (Canary Wharf)


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