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London Street Signs

Alistair Hall, author of LONDON STREET SIGNS published by Batsford, introduces a few local signs and reveals some of the background to these often overlooked and unappreciated pieces of typographic design which are so familiar as to be almost invisible.

This cartouche on the corner of Sclater St and Brick Lane reads ‘THIS IS SCLATER Street 1778’ with a date is tricky to discern after so many years.  Dan Cruickshank notes that it was probably built for the distiller Daniel Delacourt.

Around Spitalfields you find a set of Bengali nameplates which sit alongside English ones. The Bengali signs were put up in the nineties and are set in Linotype Bengali, designed by Fiona Ross and Tim Holloway around 1978.

An old cast iron nameplate has been camouflaged with paint and a contemporary Tower Hamlets sign sits above it.

A cast iron nameplate dating from before 1917 when numbered postal districts were introduced in the city, it is unusual for being constructed out of two separate plates.

A creative paint job matching the lettering of the street nameplate to the surrounding wall.

On the outside of The Old Rose, a former Wapping dockworkers’ pub established in 1839. This has been called Chigwell Hill since before 1746.

Extra-condensed lettering on a pre-1917 nameplate. Despite having more condensed lettering, this sign style has some similarities to those of the N.E. postal district.

A fine blue enamel nameplate featuring the Patent Enamel Company’s manufacturer’s mark, a monogram of PEC, in the bottom right hand corner.

A milk glass nameplate from the Metropolitan Borough of Bethnal Green which was abolished in 1965. Milk glass permitted lettering to be etched into the surface of the sign which was filled with paint.

A enamel nameplate from London’s short-lived North Eastern postal district. This particular one sits on the outside of The Lauriston, formerly known as The Alexandra, established in the 1860s.

A two panel ceramic sign from the abolished NE district, officially merged into the E district in 1866 with NE later becoming the code for Newcastle. There are still a few of this style of sign across London and I think they date from the 1860s.

The top sign dates from between 1938, when the street was renamed, and 1965, when the Metropolitan Borough of Hackney ceased to exist. The lower sign features the N.E. postal district so is pre-1866.

A stone tablet with incised lettering on Rhondda Grove E3. The street was renamed in 1937 as part of a renaming of streets whose names were repeated elsewhere.

These tiled signs were once standard throughout the City as far back as the 1870s. This one does not show a postal district – they were introduced in 1857 – so it may be earlier. Ball Court is the home of Simpson’s Tavern established 1757, the oldest chophouse in London.

A hand-painted sign on the outside of St Mary Abchurch which has stood here since the twelfth century although the medieval building was destroyed in the Great Fire of London. It was rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren’s office between 1681 and 1687. There is a curious informality to the ‘Leading to …’ text and the lower case ‘g’ is eccentric.

This is a rare beast, one of only a couple in this style left in the City of London. The rest were replaced by the Corporation of London in the eighties and many of the old signs were sold off in 1991 together with certificates of authenticity. This style features a pleasingly simple identity, though the lettering and spacing of the street names is wildly haphazard. This street below Fenchurch St Station, is named after Sir Thomas Savage’s garden which occupied the site in the seventeenth century.

A trio of signs here just off Myddleton Sq. Up top is a die-stamped nameplate from the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury, featuring the MoT Compressed alphabet which dates from before 1965. Below is a small enamel plate which lists the un-numbered postal district. The postal districts were introduced in 1856 and the numbered districts introduced in 1917, so this is from somewhere in between. Below is lettering which is incised into the stucco of the house which was built in 1829 by William Chadwell Mylne who gave his family name to the street. Mylne was surveyor of the New River Company, founded in the early seventeenth century by Sir Hugh Myddleton to bring fresh water to London along an artificial waterway.

Just north of Old St, this elegant tablet is at the junction of Pear Tree St and Central St.

A great example of how the background to a nameplate can make a huge difference to its visibility. The black painted bricks make the nameplate stand out and emphasise the black letters.

An enamel sign on the outside of the Peabody Trust’s Clerkenwell Estate built in 1884 after the slum clearances of the late 1870s. The architect was Henry Darbishire. The postal district is not numbered, so it is likely to be from before 1917.

A beautiful nameplate on the outside of the Eagle in Farringdon Rd, tragically this sign has vanished since it was photographed in 2016.

Condensed serif lettering in white on a black background here at a gated entrance at the junction of Strand and Fleet St. The entrance leads to Middle Temple, one of the Inns of Court to which all barristers must belong.

Photographs copyright © Alistair Hall

Follow Alistair Hall’s instagram account for more London street signs

You may also like to take a look at

The Weathervanes of London 



This post first appeared on Spitalfields Life | In The Midst Of Life I Woke To, please read the originial post: here

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London Street Signs

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