Area photos


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(51.5444277 -0.1476984, 51.544 -0.147) 


LOCAL PHOTOS
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Camden Town (1920s)
TUM image id: 1557159163
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All Saints, Camden Town, in 1828.
TUM image id: 1492970567
Licence: CC BY 2.0
Camden High Street
TUM image id: 1547918916
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In the neighbourhood...

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Camden Town (1920s)
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Entrance to the Fleet River, c. 1750
Credit: Samuel Scott
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Sainsbury’s Allcroft Road depot This was built in what is now NW5 in the 1880s
Credit: J. Sainsbury
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Camden High Street
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Two women walking past the graffiti ’No Evictions!’ on a railway bridge on Grafton Road, NW5. Much of the area was bulldozed and redeveloped in the 1960s and early 1970s.
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An STL bus entering Park Street, NW1 from the High Street (1930) The former Brittania pub is on the extreme right. The pub was later a shop and its ornamental lamps have long disappeared. The bank building, seen between the two buses, belonged to the Westminster Bank, who amalgamated with the National Provincial to become the Natwest.
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'The Benevolent Institution for the Relief of Aged and Infirm Journeymen' was founded in Kentish Town on 10 February 1837. The asylum consisted of the chapel and ten houses; the dwelling at the south end being appropriated for the chaplain. Each house consisted of eight rooms, two being allotted to each pensioner. As reported in 1843, there were thirty-six male pensioners and their wives in the asylum. In addition to the apartments, each pensioner received 8 shillings a week plus coal.
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Sainsbury’s opened its first depot in Langford Mews, Kentish Town around 1880. This was where Sainsbury’s smoked bacon and had stabling and warehouses to supply the growing chain of Sainsbury stores until the Company’s headquarters moved to Blackfriars in 1891.
Credit: https://www.locallocalhistory.co.uk/
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Hetty Scott at her greengrocer stall outside 159 Queen’s Crescent, Kentish Town (1914)
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Camden High Street
Credit: IG/dilan.studio
Licence: CC BY 2.0