Extensive Definition
Whitechapel is a built-up inner city
district in the
London Borough of Tower Hamlets, England. It is
located 3.4 miles (5.5 km) east of Charing
Cross and roughly bounded by the Bishopsgate
thoroughfare on the west, Hanbury
Street on the north, Brady Street
and Cavell
Street on the east and Commercial
Road on the south.
History
Whitechapel's heart is Whitechapel
High Street, extending further east as Whitechapel
Road, named for a small chapel of
ease dedicated to St Mary. Its
earliest known rector was Hugh de Fulbourne in 1329. In about 1338
it became the parish church of Whitechapel, called, for unknown
reasons, St Mary Matfelon. It was destroyed through enemy action in
World War II and its location and graveyard is now a public garden
on the south side of the road. Whitechapel High Street and
Whitechapel Road are now part of the A11 road,
anciently the initial part of the Roman road between the City of
London and Colchester,
exiting the city at Aldgate. In later
times travellers to and from London on this route were accommodated
at the many coaching
inns which lined Whitechapel High Street.
By the late 16th century
the suburb of Whitechapel and the surrounding area had started
becoming 'the other half' of London. Located east of Aldgate, outside
the City
Walls and beyond official controls, it attracted the less
fragrant activities of the city, particularly tanneries, breweries,
foundries (including the Whitechapel
Bell Foundry which later cast Philadelphia's Liberty Bell
and London's
Big Ben) and slaughterhouses.
In 1680, the Rector of Whitechapel, the Rev.
Ralph
Davenant, of the parish of St. Mary Matfellon, bequeathed a
legacy for the education of forty boys and thirty girls of the
parish - the Davenant
Centre is still in existence although the Davenant
Foundation School moved from Whitechapel to Loughton in
1966.
Population shifts from rural areas to London from
the 17th
century to the mid 19th century
resulted in great numbers of more or less destitute people taking
up residence amidst the industries and mercantile interests that
had attracted them. By the 1840s Whitechapel, along with the
enclaves of Wapping, Aldgate, Bethnal
Green, Mile End,
Limehouse,
Bow,
Bromley-by-Bow,
Poplar,
Shadwell
and Stepney
(collectively known today as "the East
End"), had evolved, or devolved, into classic "dickensian"
London, with problems of poverty and overcrowding. Whitechapel Rd.
itself was not particularly squalid through most of this
period—it was the warrens of small dark streets branching
from it that contained the greatest suffering, filth and danger,
such as Dorset St. (now a private alley but once known as "the
worst street in London"), Thrawl St., Berners St. (renamed Henriques
St.), Wentworth St. and others.
William
Booth began his Christian Revival Society, preaching the gospel
in a tent, erected in the Friends Burial Ground, Thomas Street,
Whitechapel, in 1865. Others joined his Christian Mission, and on
August
7, 1878
the Salvation
Army was formed at a meeting held at 272 Whitechapel Road. A
statue commemorates both his mission and his work in helping the
poor.
In the Victorian
era the basal population of poor English country stock was
swelled by immigrants from all over, particularly Irish and Jewish.
Writing of the period 1883–1884, Yiddish
theatre actor Jacob Adler
wrote, "The further we penetrated into this Whitechapel, the more
our hearts sank. Was this London? Never in Russia, never later in
the worst slums of New York, were we to see such poverty as in the
London of the 1880s." This endemic poverty drove many women to
prostitution. In October 1888 the Metropolitan police estimated
that there were twelve hundred prostitutes "of very low class"
resident in Whitechapel and about sixty-two brothels. Reference is
specifically made to them in
Charles Booth (philanthropist)'s
Life and Labour of the People of London, specially to dwellings
called Blackwall
Buildings belonging to Blackwall Railway. Such prostitutes were
numbered amongst the eleven
Whitechapel Murders (1888-91), some of which were committed by
the legendary serial killer known as 'Jack the
Ripper'. These attacks caused widespread terror in the district
and throughout the country and drew the attention of social
reformers to the squalor and vice of the area.
In 1902, American author Jack London,
looking to write a counterpart to Jacob Riis's
seminal book
How the Other Half Lives, donned ragged clothes and boarded in
Whitechapel, detailing his experiences in
The People of the Abyss. Riis had recently documented the
astoundingly bad conditions in large swaths of the leading city of
the United States. London, a socialist, thought it worthwhile to
explore conditions in the leading city of the nation that had
invented modern capitalism. He concluded that
English poverty was far rougher than the American variety. The
juxtaposition of the poverty, homelessness, exploitive work
conditions, prostitution, and infant mortality of Whitechapel and
other East End locales with some of the greatest personal wealth
the world has ever seen made it a focal point for leftist reformers
and revolutionaries of all kinds, from George
Bernard Shaw, whose Fabian
Society met regularly in Whitechapel, to Vladimir
Ilyich Lenin, who boarded and led rallies in Whitechapel during
his exile from Russia. The area is still home to Freedom
Press, the anarchist publishing house founded by Charlotte
Wilson.
The "Elephant Man", Joseph
Carey Merrick (1862-1890) became well-known in Whitechapel - he
was exhibited in a shop on the Whitechapel Road before being helped
by Dr Frederick
Treves (1853-1923) at the Royal
London Hospital, opposite the actual shop. There is a museum in
the hospital about his life.
Whitechapel remained poor (and colourful) through
the first half of the 20th
century, though somewhat less desperately so. It suffered great
damage in the Blitz and
the V1/V2
German "flying bomb" attacks of World War II. Since then,
Whitechapel has lost most of its notoriety, though it is still
thoroughly working
class. The Bangladeshis are
the most visible migrant group today, and the East
London Mosque on Whitechapel Road is a major symbol of the
resident Islamic community. Whitechapel is also home to many
aspiring artists and shoestring entrepreneurs.
Future
The East
London line of the tube is being extended northwards to
Dalston and southwards to West
Croydon, planned for completion in 2010. A further
extension is planned in phase 2, to provide a complete rail ring
route around south London to Clapham
Junction, this is unlikely to be completed before 2015. Whitechapel is
also scheduled to be a stop on the Crossrail
project, again, unlikely to be completed before 2015.
These changes are likely to lead to a radical
redevelopment of the area, making it more attractive to businesses,
but pricing existing residents out of the area.
Culture
Whitechapel Road was the location of two 19th
century theatres: 'The Effingham' (1834-1897) and 'The Pavilion'
(1828-1935; building demolished in 1962). Charles
Dickens, Jr (eldest child of Charles
Dickens), in his 1879 book
Dickens's Dictionary of London, described the Pavilion thusly:
"A large East-end theatre capable of holding considerably over
3,000 persons. Melodrama of a rough type, farce, pantomime,
&c."
In the early 20th century it became the home of Yiddish
theatre, catering to the large Jewish population of the area,
and gave birth to the Anglo-Jewish 'Whitechapel
Boys' avant-garde literary and artistic movement.
Since at least the 1970s, Whitechapel and other
nearby parts of East London have figured prominently in London's
art scene. Probably the area's most prominent art venue is the
Whitechapel
Art Gallery, founded in 1901 and long an outpost of high
culture in a poor neighbourhood. As the neighbourhood has
gentrified, it has gained citywide, and even international,
visibility and support. As of 2005, the gallery is undergoing a
major expansion, with the support of £3.26 million from the
Heritage Lottery Fund. The expanded facility is due to open in
2007/8.
Whitechapel in the early 21st century has figured
prominently in London's punk
rock/skuzz rock scene,
with the main focal point for this scene being Whitechapel
Factory and Rhythm
Factory bar/restaurant/nightclub. This scene includes the likes
of The
Libertines, Zap!, Nova,
The
Others, Razorlight,
15Peter20 and The Rakes, all
of whom have had some commercial success in the music charts.
In literature
Whitechapel features in Charles Dickens's Pickwick Papers where it is characterised by Sam Weller "as not a wery nice neighbourhood". One of Fagin's dens in Dickens's Oliver Twist was located in Whitechapel and Fagin, himself, was possibly based on a notorious local 'fence' named Ikey Solomon (1785-1850). Whitechapel is also the scene of Israel Zangwill's Children of the Ghetto and the novels of Simon Blumenfield. Whitechapel is used as a location in most if not all Jack the Ripper fiction. One such example is the bizarre White Chappel Scarlet Tracings (1987) by Iain Sinclair.Other noteworthy natives or residents
In addition to the prominent figures detailed in
the article:
- Jack Kid Berg, boxer, "The Whitechapel Windmill", British Lightweight Champion 1934
- Tina Charles, 70s disco artist, 1954
- Peter Cheyney, mystery writer and journalist, 1896-1951
- Ashley Cole, Chelsea and England footballer 1980
- Jack Cohen, British-Jewish businessman who founded the Tesco supermarket chain, 1898-1979
- Roger Delgado, Actor (best known as "The Master" in Doctor Who), 1918-1973
- Bud Flanagan, (born Chaim Reuven Weintrop), music hall comedian on stage, radio, film and television, 1896-1968
- Margaret Pepys (née Kite), mother of famous diarist Samuel Pepys, d. 1667
- Shahara Islam, 20 year old of Bangladeshi descent killed in the 7 July 2005 London terrorist attacks
- Simon Blumenfeld, novelist, playwright and columnist,1907-2005.
- Jack "Spot" Comer, Jewish gangster and anti-Fascist, 1912-1996
- Alan Tilvern, film and television actor, 1918-2003
- Abraham Beame, first Jewish mayor of New York City, 1906-2001
- Abe Saperstein, founder of the Harlem Globetrotters basketball team
- Richard Brandon (? - June 20, 1649), the reputed executioner of King Charles I was buried at the Whitechapel parish church of St. Mary Matfelon. The church register records that he lived in Rosemary Lane (modern Royal Mint Street).
- Martin John Callanan - artist
- Charles Lahr, anarchist bookseller/publisher, secretary of Whitechapel branch of the Industrial Union of Direct Actionists (IUDA), 1885-1971.
- Avrom Stencl, Yiddish poet, early companion of Franz Kafka, published Loshn and Lebn in Whitechapel, 1897-1983.
- Rudolf Rocker, anarcho-syndicalist writer, historian and prominent activist, active in Whitechapel 1895-1918, 1873-1958
Education
- For details of education in Whitechapel see the List of schools in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets
Nearest places
Districts
Nearest Underground stations
Nearest railway stations
See also
References
External links
- Official web site for the ward of Whitechapel
- Primary source articles
- Tower Hamlets History Online
- Jack London - The People of the Abyss - account of his 1902 stay amongst the East End poor (Text)
- Nighttime photos of Whitechapel and environs. Commentary is in German, but it is mostly photos.
- The Whitechapel Gallery
Whitechapel in French: Whitechapel
Whitechapel in Hindi: ह्वाइटचैपल
Whitechapel in Italian: Whitechapel
Whitechapel in Dutch: Whitechapel
Whitechapel in Norwegian: Whitechapel
Whitechapel in Polish: Whitechapel
Whitechapel in Spanish:
Whitechapel