Publication Cover
The London Journal
A Review of Metropolitan Society Past and Present
Volume 15, 1990 - Issue 2
18
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Periodical Articles on London History, published in 1988 and 1989

Periodical Articles on London History, published in 1988 and 1989

Pages 164-175 | Published online: 18 Jul 2013

Medieval and 16th centuries

  • ANDERSON, FREDA. Three Westminster abbots: a problem of identity. Church Monuments, IV (1989), 3-15.
  • ARCHER, IAN. The London lobbies in the later 16th century. Hist. Jour., XXXI (1988), 17-44. [ Lob-bying of government by livery companies.]
  • BAILEY, KEITH. Aspects of the Reformation in Wandsworth. Wandsworth Histn., no. 54 (1988), 1-3; no. 55 (1988), 4-6. [Wandsworth town & Tooting Graveney.]
  • BERRY, HERBERT. The first public playhouses, especially the Red Lion. Shakespeare Quart., XL (1989), 133-48.
  • CHRISTIANSON, C. PAUL. I. Paternoster Row and the Tudor book-trade community. Library, 6th ser. XI (1989), 352-6.
  • CHRISTIANSON, C. PAUL. A community of book artisans in Chaucer's London. Viator, XX (1989), 207-18.
  • COOK, ANN JENNALIE. John Stow 's storm and the demolition of the Theatre. Shakespeare Quart., XL (1989), 327-8.
  • DEAN, D. M. Public or private? London, leather and legislation in Elizabethan England. Hist. Jour., XXXI (1988), 525-49.
  • DEAN, DAVID. London lobbies and Parliament: the case of the Brewers and Coopers in the Parliament of 1593. Parliamentary Hist., VIII (1989), 341-65.
  • ERLER, MARY C. Wynkyn de Worde 's will: legatees and bequests. Library, 6th ser. X (1988), 107-21. [ d.1534?]
  • GALVIN, CAROL, and LINDLEY, PHILIP. Pietro Torrigiano 's tomb for Dr Yonge. Church Monuments, III (1988), 42-60. [ In museum of P.R.O. Similarities with T's tomb for Henry VII.]
  • HOMER, RONALD FREDERICK. The Pewterers' Company vs. John Whitehead, 1478. Pewter Soc. Jour, VI (1988), 92-5.
  • HOMER, RONALD FREDERICK. A 16th century Lon-don pewterer's work book fragment. Pewter Soc. Jour., VII (1989), 18-22. [ Three leaves bound as end leaves in first volume of Pewterers' Company court book.]
  • HOULISTON, V. D. Sleepers awake: Thomas Moffet's challenge to the College of Physicians of London, 1584. Medical Hist., XXXIII (1989), 235-46.
  • INGRAM, WILLIAM. The early career of James Burbage. Elizabethan Theatre, X (1988), 18-36. [ Involved with playhouse venture at Red Lion, Stepney, 1567.]
  • JACOBS, DEREK. Sixteenth century Ruislip houses. Ruislip, Northwood and Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour. (1988), 20-6. [ Based on wills.]
  • JACOBS, DEREK. Some 16th century Ruislip fami-lies. Ruislip, Northwood and Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour. (1989), 7-17.
  • JOHNSON, GERALD D. The Stationers versus the Drapers: control of the press in the late 16th century. Library, 6th ser. X (1988), 1-17.
  • JOHNSON, GERALD D. William Barley, ‘publisher and seller of bookes’, 1591-1614. Library, 6th ser. XI (1989), 10-46. [ Barley and the book trade, plus his musical interests.]
  • KEENE, DEREK. Medieval London and its region. London Jour., XIV (1989), 99-111.
  • KEENE, DEREK. New discoveries at the Hanseatic Steelyard in London. Hansische Geschichtsblatter, CVII (1989), 15-25.
  • LOGAN, F. DONALD. Doctors' Commons in the early 16th century: a society of many talents. Hist. Research, LXI (1988), 151-65.
  • MATTHEWS, RICHARD M. S. Queen Elizabeth I and Havering: a postscript to the Armada. Romford Record, XXI (1989), 25-8.
  • MCINTOSH, MARJORIE K. Money lending on the periphery of London, 1300-1600. Albion, XX (1988), 557-71. [ Mainly manor of Havering.]
  • MCMILLIN, scam The Queen's Men and the London theatre of 1583. Elizabethan Theatre, X (1988), 1-17.
  • MONTAGU, JEREMY. The restored Chapter House wall paintings in Westminster Abbey. Early Music, XVI (1988), 239-49.
  • MURRAY, JACQUELINE. Kinship and friendship: the perception of family by clergy and laity in late medieval London. Albion, XX (1988), 369-85.
  • NIGHTINGALE, PAMELA. Capitalists, crafts and con-stitutional change in late 14th century London. Past & Present, no. 124 (1989), 3-35.
  • NORTON, ERIC. The moated manor house at Plat-form Wharf, Rotherhithe. London Archaeologist, V (1988), 395-401.
  • PRITCHARD, FRANCIS. Two royal seal bags from Westminster Abbey. Textile Hist., XX (1989), 225-34.
  • ROBERTSON, J. C. Furnishings seized in London, 1575. Furniture Hist., XXV (1989), 36-41. [ Household goods of Rocco Bonetti, Venetian merchant, seized in suit before Mayor's court.]
  • ROGERS, DAVID. The escape of Thomas Tichborne. Recusant Hist., XIX (1989), 411-25. [ Recusant, escaped from Gatehouse prison in late 16th century.]
  • SAMUEL, MARK. The 15th-century garner at Leadenhall, London. Antiquaries Jour., LXIX (1989), 119-53.
  • THURLEY, SIMON. Henry VII I and the building of Hampton Court: a reconstruction of the Tudor palace. Archit. Hist., XXXI (1988), 1-57. 16th and 17th centuries
  • BERGERON, DAVID M. Representation in Renaiss-ance English civic pageants. Theatre Jour., XL (1988), 319-31. [ Royal entries of Elizabeth I (1559) and James 1 (1604). ]
  • BERGERON, DAVID M. Patronage of dramatists: the case of Thomas Heywood. English Lit. Renaiss-ance, XVIII (1988), 294-304. [ Heywood was author of Lord Mayor's shows, & patronised by the guilds.]
  • CAIN, PIERS. Robert Smith and the reform of the archives of the City of London, 1580-1623. London Jour., XIII (1987-8), 3-16.
  • CHRISTENSEN, CHARLOTTE. From Elsinore to Lon-don. Apollo, CXXVIII (1988), 110-15. [ Artistic links between royal courts of Denmark and England.]
  • COX, JACQUELINE. The Corsini letters, 1567-1637. Soc. Archivists Jour., IX (1988), 81-3. [ City merchants.]
  • GAIR, REAVLEY. Takeover at Blackfriars: Queen's Revels to King's Men. Elizabethan Theatre, X (1988), 37-54.
  • HARDING, VANESSA. ‘And one more may be laid there’: the location of burials in early modern London. London Jour., XIV (1989), 112-29.
  • SCOULOUDI, IRENE. Notes on strangers in the precinct of St Katherine-by-the-Tower, c. 1500-1687, and on the ‘Flemish cemetery’. Huguenot Soc. Proc., XXV (1989), 75-82.
  • WANAMAKER, SAM. Shakespeare's Globe reborn. R.S.A. Jour., 000(111 (Dec. 1989), 25-34. [ Includes historical background.]
  • ALEXANDER, JAMES. The economic structure of the city of London at the end of the 17th century. Urban History Yearbook (1989), 47-62. [Based on 1690s tax assessments.]
  • ALSOP, JAMES DOUGLAS. Ethics in the marketplace: Gerard Winstanley's London bankruptcy, 1643. Jour. Brit. Studies, XXVIII (1989), 97-119.
  • BEDDARD, ROBERT ANTHONY. Anti-popery and the London mob, 1688. Hist. Today, XXXVIII (1988), 36-9.
  • BELL, MAUREEN. Hannah Allen and the develop-ment of a Puritan publishing business, 1646-51. Publishing Hist., XXVI (1989), 5-66.
  • BURLING, WILLIAM J. Summer theatre in London, 1661-94. Theatre Notebook, XLII (1988), 14-22.
  • CHOUDHURY, MITA. ‘The Patentee’ - and some questions about Dorset Garden theatre in 1700. Theatre Hist. Stud., VIII (1988), 89-98.
  • COOK, HAROLD J. POLICING the health of London; the College of Physicians and the early Stuart monarchy. Soc. Hist. Medicine,11 (1989), 1-33.
  • EARLE, PETER. The female labour market in Lon-don in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Econ. Hist. Rev., 2nd ser. XLII no. 3 (1989), 328-53.
  • ECCLES, MARK. Ben Jonson, ‘citizen and brick-layer’. N. & Q., CCXXXIII (1988), 445-6.
  • EWLES, ROSEMARY. Charlton House: a building in context. Greenwich & Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1989), 217-37.
  • GRELL, OLE PETER. Calvinist agape Or godly dining club? An example of the revival of an early Christian tradition within the Dutch exile com-munity in London during the early 17th century. Ned erlands Archief voor Kerkgeschiedenis, LXVIII (1988), 36-45.
  • GURR, ANDREW. Money or audiences: the impact of Shakespeare's Globe. Theatre Notebook, XLII (1988), 3-14.
  • HARRIS, JOHN FREDERICK. Who designed the York water gate? Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 150-1. [ Attributed to Inigo Jones.]
  • HARRIS, TIM. Was the Tory reaction popular? Attitudes of Londoners towards the persecution of dissent, 1681-6. London Jour., XIII (1987-8), 106-20.
  • HARRIS, TIM. The problem of ‘popular political culture’ in 17th-century London. Hist. of Euro-pean Ideas, X (1989), 184-203.
  • HORDEN, JOHN ROBERT BACKHOUSE. ‘In the Savoy’: John Nutt and his family. Publishing Hist., no. 24 (1988), 5-26.
  • JACQUES, DAVID. ‘The chief ornaments of Gray's Inn’: the walks from Bacon to Brown. Garden Hist., XVII (1989), 41-67.
  • JEFFERY, PAUL. The church that never was: Wren's St Mary and other projects for Lincoln's Inn Fields. Archit. Hist., XXXI (1988), 136-47.
  • JONES, STEPHANIE KAREN. The entertainments of the Barbers' Company in the 17th century. St. Giles Cripplegate with St. Luke's Mag. (June 1989), 14-16; (July-Aug. 1989), 21-3.
  • LUCKETT, RICHARD. A new source for Venus and Adonis. Musical Times, CXXX (1989), 76-9. [ By John Blow, d. 1708. May have had first perform-ance at Josias Priest's boarding school for girls in Chelsea, 1684.]
  • MACGREGOR, ARTHUR. ‘A magazin [sic] of all manner of inventions’: museums in the quest for `Saloman's House' in 17th-century England. Jour. of the Hist. of Collections, I (1989), 207-12. [ Attempts to give substance to Francis Bacon's vision of a multi-disciplinary research institution. Vauxhall considered as a possible site.]
  • MCGUINNESS, ROSAMOND. `The medium is the message': some aspects of music and the London press c.1670-c. 1700. Factotum, no. 26 (1988), 10-14.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. New documents about the London theatre, 1685-1711. Harvard Lib. Bull., X,OCVI (1988), 248-74.
  • ROGERS, EDWARD. The plague in Cripplegate: the suffering of working people. St. Giles Cripplegate with St. Luke's Mag. (Oct. 1989), 14-16. [1665.]
  • ROTHSTEIN, NATALIE. Canterbury and London: the silk industry in the late 17th century. Textile Hist., XX (1989), 33-47.
  • STAMP, GAVIN. Wren's vision of St Paul's. Archi-tects' Jour., CLXXXVII (1988), 24-5.
  • WHITE, ADAM. Westminster Abbey in the early 17th century: a powerhouse of ideas. Church Monuments, IV (1989), 16-53.
  • WILKS, TIMOTHY. The picture collection of Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset (c.1587-1645), reconsidered. Jour. of the Hist. of Collections, 1 (1989), 167-77. [ Paintings displayed in Carr's Whitehall chambers. Some later moved to house in Bishops-gate.] 18th century
  • APPLEBY, JOHN H. and MILLBURN, JOHN R. Henry or Humphrey? The Jacksons, 18th-century chemists. Library, 6th ser., X (1988), 30-43.
  • APPLEBY, LOUIS. Georgian values. Brit. Med. Jour., CCXCVIII (1989), 968-9. [ Thomas Coram foundation.]
  • ATKINS, PETER JOSEPH. Eighteenth century London directories. Factotum, no. 28 (1989), 12-15.
  • BAINES, PAUL. Curll at the Old Bailey. Factotum, no. 30 (1989), 6-9. [ In 1732 Edmund Curll, book-seller, accused his servant Sarah Beeston of theft, and James Gibson of receiving the stolen goods.]
  • BARKER, THEODORE CARDWELL. Business as usual? London and the Industrial Revolution. Hist. Today, XXXIX (1989), 45-51.
  • BARLOW, GRAHAM F. Vanbrugh's Queen's Theatre in the Haymarket, 1703-9. Early Music, XVII (1989), 515-21.
  • BENTON, TONY. ‘Strange times in the liberty’: Essex marriages in London before 1754. Essex Family Historian, no. 50 (1988), 9-12.
  • BEST, DAVID. ‘The education and instruction of the poor children of the said parish’. The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, LXV no. 274 (1989), 76-7. [ Bishopsgate ward school, founded 1726, and the Central Foundation schools.]
  • BLACKMORE, HOWARD LOFTUS. William Rawle, accoutrement maker, silversmith, gunmaker, medallist and collector. Apollo, CXXVII (1988), 96-100. [ Premises at 430 Strand.]
  • BOWLT, EILEEN M. A Foundling Hospital nursery at Ickenham. Ruislip, Northwood and Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour. (1988), 37-40.
  • BUCK, MAURICE. The Thames police. Police Hist. Soc. Jour., no. 3 (1988), 11-17.
  • BURNBY, JUANITA G. L. John Channing: Arabist and apothecary. Pharm. Historian, XVIII no. 4 (1988), 4-6.
  • BURTON, NEIL. Georgian gardens. Archit. Rev., CLVOCVI (1989), 93-8. [ Includes London.]
  • BUSHNELL, F. H. D. London's posts before penny postage. London Postal Hist. Group Notebook, no. 87 (1988), 16-20.
  • CALVERT, GABRIELLE. Robert Young: an 18th century philanthropist? Family Tree, VI (1989), 18-19. [ Founded the Philanthropic Society in London.]
  • CAMPBELL, COLIN. All human life was there. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 222-3. [ Hogarth's Southwark Fair.]
  • CHEMINANT, RICHARD LE. The token coinage of the mayors of Garrat. Wandsworth Histn., no. 57 (1989), 1-5.
  • CLARK, PETER. The ‘Mother Gin’ Controversy in early 18th-century England. R. H. S. • Trans., XXXVIII (1988), 63-84. [ Mainly London.]
  • CLARKE, T. H. Sir Charles Hanbury Williams and the Chelsea factory. Eng. Ceramic Circle Trans., XIII pt. 2 (1988), 110-20.
  • CRUICKSHANK, DAN. Spital Square and the liberty of Norton Folgate: the development of an 18th century London quarter. Georgian Grp. Rept. & Jour. (1988), 43–7.
  • DONALD, DIANA. ‘Mr Deputy Dumpling and family’: satirical images of the City merchant in 18th century England. Burlington Mag., CXXXI (1989), 755-63.
  • D'SENA, PETER. Perquisites and casual labour On the London wharfside in the 18th century. Lon-don Jour., XIV (1989), 130-47.
  • DURANT, CATHERINE. London's first northern by-pass: urban development and the New Road from Paddington to Islington. Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 15-19. [ Started in 1756.]
  • EHRMAN, ESTHER. Huguenot participation in the French theatre in London, 1700-50. Huguenot Soc. Proc., XXIV (1988), 480-92.
  • FAIRCLOUGH, KEITH R. The river Lea before 1767: an adequate flash lock navigation. Jour. Trans. Hist., X (1989), 128-44.
  • FAIRCLOUGH, KEITH. Gunpowder production at Balham House. London's Industrial Archaeology, IV (1989), 32-4.
  • FERDINAND, C. Y. Richard Baldwin junior, book-seller. Studies in Bibliog., XLII (1989), 254-64. [ b.1724.]
  • FIELD, JOAN. Edward Townly, the horticulturalist. North West Kent Family Hist., IV (1988), 404-8. [ In 1797 Townly took over a nursery behind Walworth Road.]
  • FRASER, JAMES. William Law: a forgotten resident of Putney. Wandsworth Histn., no. 58 (1989), 18-20.
  • GAGE, JOHN. Where was Capper's farm? A query from rural Bloomsbury. Camden Hist. Rev., XVI (1989), 26-8.
  • HAMILTON-BRADBURY, MILLICENT J. Pitt's house in Hampstead: the history of Wildwoods. Camden Hist. Rev., XVI (1989), 10-13.
  • HARRISON, CARL. The house that Joseph Allin built. Greenwich & Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1988), 164-78. [ Master shipwright's house at Deptford dockyard, built for JA in 1708.]
  • KELLY, ALISON. Sir John Soane and Mrs Eleanor Coade: a long-lasting business relationship. Apollo, CXXIX (1989), 247-53.
  • KENT, DAVID A. Ubiquitous but invisible: female domestic servants in mid-18th century London. Hist. Workshop, no. 28 (1989), 111-28.
  • LASOCKI, DAVID. The French hautboy in England, 1673-1730. Early Music, XVI (1988), 339-57. [ Almost exclusively about London. Concludes with biographical listing of London oboists.]
  • LATHAM, J. P.M. Limehouse inhabitants, 1711 19. Eng. Ceramic Circle Trans., XIII pt. 2 (1988), 148-51. [ Based on land tax assessments.]
  • LUDLOW, BARBARA. The vestry met, the rate was set: administration in Greenwich, 1770-1800. Greenwich & Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1989), 238-47.
  • MAITLAND, C. ERNESTINE. Jane Randolph and Shadwell. East London Record, XI (1988), 10-17. [ Mother of Thos. Jefferson.]
  • MANLEY, KEITH ANDREW. London circulating lib-rary catalogues of the 1740s. Library Hist., VIII no. 3 (1989), 74-9.
  • MASLEN, K. I. D. The Bowyer ledgers: their historical importance. Bibliog. Soc. of America Papers, LXXXII (1988), 139-49. [ Kept by Wil-liam Bowyer, father & son printers, 1710-77.]
  • MCVEIGH, SIMON. The professional concert and rival subscription series in London, 1783-93. Roy. Mus. Assoc. Research Chronicle, XXII (1988), 1-135.
  • MCVEIGH, SIMON. Music and the Lock hospital in the 18th century. Musical Times, CXXIX (1988), 235-40.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. ‘A Letter to Sir John Stanley’: a new theatrical document of 1712. Theatre Notebook, XLIII (1989), 71-80. [ Broadside concerning management of Drury Lane playhouse.]
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. The Haymarket opera in 1711. Early Music, XVII (1989), 523-37.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. Profits at Drury Lane, 1713-16. Theatre Research Internat., XIV (1989), 241-55.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. David Garrick and box-office receipts at Drury Lane in 1742-43. Philological Quart., LXVII (1988), 323-44.
  • MILLBURN, J. R. The Office of Ordnance and the instrument-making trade in the mid-18th century. Annals of Science, XLV (1988), 221-94.
  • MILLER, DAVID P. ‘Into the valley of darkness’: reflections on the Royal Society in the 18th century. Hist. of Science, XXVII pt. 2 (1989), 155-66.
  • MONSON, LESLIE. Common informers in Green-wich and Deptford, 1743. Greenwich & Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1988), 179-88.
  • MORRIS, MARILYN. Representations of royalty in the London daily press in the decade of the French Revolution. Newspaper & Periodical Hist. Jour., IV no. 2 (1988), 2-15.
  • MURDOCH, TESSA. Early warning system: carriers' walks in the 18th century. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 202-4. [ Goldsmiths' Company members received warning notices of lost or stolen items in 1744.]
  • NEALE, J. A. More tilting at Windmills. Antiq. Horology, XVII (1988), 563-82. [ Clockmakers Joseph and Thomas Windmills.]
  • O'NEIL, JEAN. John Rocque as a guide to gardens. Garden Hist., XVI (1988), 8-16.
  • PAGE, JANET K. The hautboy in London's musical life, 1730-1770. Early Music, XVI (1988), 359-71. [ Counterpart to David Lasocki's paper in same vol. Ends with biographical listing of oboists.]
  • PASMORE, STEPHEN. Admirable landscape: the Bayswater tea gardens. Country Life, CLXXXII (1988), 212.
  • PHYSICK, JOHN FREDERICK. Westminster Abbey: designs for Poets' Corner and a new Roubilac in the cloister. Church Monuments, IV (1989), 54-63.
  • PODMORE, COLIN J. The Fetter Lane Society, 1738. Wesley Hist. Soc. Proc., XLVI (1988), 125-53. [ Origins of the Moravian church in London.]
  • PRICE, CURTIS. Italian opera and arson in late eighteenth-century London. Jour. American Musicol. Soc., XLII (1989), 55-107. [ Hitherto unused archives of Bedford estate include records of King's Theatre at the Pantheon 1790-2, & New Haymarket opera house.]
  • RANGER, PAUL. I let the curtain fall: the tragic story of a Wessex comedian on the London stage, Thomas Collins, 1775-1806. Hatcher Rev., III (1988), 273-85.
  • ROBINSON, JOHN MARTIN. Wentworth House: 5 St. James's Square. Country Life, CLXXXII (1988), 186-9.
  • ROBINSON, JOHN MARTIN. Number 20 St. James's Square, London. Country Life, CLXXXII (1988), 152-7. [ Designed by Robert Adam.]
  • ROGERS, NICHOLAS. Carnal knowledge: illegiti-macy in 18th century Westminster. Jour. of Social Hist., XXIII (1989), 355-75.
  • SCHUBERT, ERIC S. Arbitrage in the foreign exchange markets of London and Amsterdam during the 18th century. Explorations in Econo-mic Hist., XXVI (1989), 1-20.
  • SHANE, DENISE ELLIOTT. John Rich and the reopen-ing of Lincoln's Inn Fields. Theatre Notebook, XLII (1988), 23-31.
  • SHUGG, WALLACE. The baron and the milliner: Lord Baltimore's rape trial as a mirror of class tensions in mid-Georgian London. Maryland Hist. Mag., LXXXIII (1988), 310-30.
  • SIMON, JOAN. From charity school to workhouse in the 1720s: the S.P.C.K. and Mr. Marriott's solution. Hist. of Educ., XVII (1988), 113-29.
  • TARGETT, PETER. Edward Kidder: his book and his schools. Petit Propos Culinaires, XXXII (1989), 35-44. [ London cookery schools.]
  • THALE, MARY. London debating societies in the 1790s. Hist. Jour., XXXII (1989), 57-86.
  • THOMAS, D. O. Richard Price and the Freedom of the City of London. Enlightenment and Dissent, VIII (1989), 90-109. [ Presented in recognition of a political pamphlet in support of the American colonies.]
  • VIATOR, TIMOTHY J. Theobald's preface to ‘Richard II’ and the possible closing of Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1719. Rest. & 18th Cent. Theatre Research, III (1988), 30-3.
  • WATNEY, BERNARD MARTIN. The Vauxhall china works, 1751-64. Eng. Ceramic Circle Trans., XIII Pt. 3 (1989), 219-28.
  • WEBER, WILLIAM. The 1784 Handel Commemora-tion as political ritual. Jour. Brit. Studies, XXVIII (1989), 43-69. [ Series of concerts at Westminster Abbey.]
  • WEBSTER, MARY. An 18th century family: Hogarth's portrait of the Graham children. Apollo, CXXX (1989), 171-3. [ Children of Daniel Graham, Apothecary of Royal Hospital, Chelsea.]
  • WILD, MICHAEL. Finding out about 18th century London apprentices. West Middx. Family Hist. Soc. Jour., VII (1988), 5-6.
  • WILSON, ADRIAN. Illegitimacy and its implications in mid-18th century London: the evidence of the Foundling Hospital. Continuity & Change, IV pt.1 (1989), 103-64.
  • WINKLER, K. T. The forces of the market and the London newspapers in the first half of the 18th century. Newspaper & Periodical Hist. Jour., IV no. 2 (1988), 22-35. [ Rev. article Michael Harris's ‘London newspapers in the age of Walpole’.]
  • WORSLEY, GILES. Entertaining architecture. Coun-try Life, CLXXXII (1988), 142-3. [ Sir Thomas Robinson's house in Whitehall yard.]
  • YEOMANS, DAVID T. Managing 18th-century build-ing. Construction Hist., IV (1988), 3-19. [ In London.] 18th and 19th centuries
  • BARBER, PETER. Hampstead's first historian: ‘pain-ful reflections’ on Thomas and John James Park. Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 32-4. [ T.P., 1759-1834; J.J.P., 1795-1833.]
  • BROWN, MALCOLM. The Jews of Hackney before 1840. Jewish Hist. Studies, XXX (1987-8), 71-89.
  • BRYAN, MICHAEL. In search of the early prospect of Chelsea. Chelsea Soc. Report (1988), 28–31.
  • CHIUSTODOULOU, JOAN. The freethinking Christ-ians and the Millennium. London Jour., XIV (1989), 148-59.
  • CLARK, ANNA. The sexual crisis and popular religion in London, 1770-1820. Internat. Labor and Working-Class Hist., XXXIV (1988), 56-69.
  • COLEY, NOEL G Medical chemistry at Guy's Hospi-tal, 1770-1850. Ambix, XXXV (1988), 155-68.
  • COX, MARGARET. The Huguenots of Spitalfields: the evidence for the Christ Church project. Huguenot Soc. Proc., XXV (1989), 21-38.
  • FILMER, JOHN L. The Norman family of Bromley Common. N. W. Kent Family Hist. Soc., V (1989), 52-4.
  • GOULDEN, R. J. The Shadow limn'd: Matthias Koops. Factotum, XXVII (1988), 16-23. [ Paper maker.]
  • ISAAC, PETER CHARLES GERALD. William Bulmer (1757-1830), fine printer. Archaeologia Aeliana, 5th ser. XVI (1988), 223–37.
  • JEFFERY, PAUL. The later history of St. Martin Outwich, City of London. London Jour., XIV (1989), 160-9.
  • KIRKHAM, PATRICIA ANNE. The London furniture trade, 1700-1870. Furniture Hist., XXIV (1988), 1-219.
  • LANDERS, JOHN, and MOUZAS, ANASTASIA. Burial seasonality and causes of death in London, 1670-1819. Population Studies, XLII (1988), 59-83.
  • LAWRENCE, SUSAN C. Entrepreneurs and private enterprise: the development of medical lecturing in London, 1775-1820. Bull. Hist. Medicine, LXII (1988), 171-92.
  • NORD, DEBORAH EPSTEIN. The city as theater: from Georgian to early Victorian London. Victorian Studies, XXXI (1988), 159-88. [ The urban scene reported by writers.]
  • PERRETT, DAVID. Industrial archaeology in Greenwich and Lewisham. Greenwich & Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1988), 195-205.
  • REYNOLDS, ELAINE A. St. Marylebone: local Police reform in London, 1755-1829. The Historian, LI (1989), 446-66.
  • ROSE, MARY B. Social policy and business: parish apprenticeship and the early factory system, 1750-1834. Business Hist., XXI (1989), 5-29. [ Many examples from London parishes.]
  • TEMPERLEY, NICHOLAS. London and the piano, 1760-1860. Musical Times, CXXIX (1988), 289-93.
  • ALLNUTT, ANTHONY J. Leisure activities in Bromley, 1888. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 66-8.
  • BAILEY, KEITH. Education for all: the Board Schools in Battersea, 1870-1900. 1, The back-ground. 2, Building the schools. 3, Bolingbroke School. 4, Winstanley Road School. Wandsworth Histn., no. 54 (1988), 20-2; no. 55 (1988), 18-22; no. 56 (1988), 20-2; no. 57 (1989), 15-16, 22.
  • BAILEY, KEITH. William Willmer Pocock, a Wand-sworth architect. Wandsworth Histn., no. 56 (1988), 9-14. [ Work in Battersea & S. Kensing-ton.]
  • BAKER, WILLIAM. The early staffing of the London Library: a note on John George Cochrane and others. Library Rev., XXXVIII no. 3 (1989), 36-41.
  • BAKER, ELAINE, and ARNOLD, MARGARET. Church and chapel. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 35-9.
  • BERKELEY, ALICE. ‘Mighty swells dwell here’: the makers of Tite Street. Chelsea Soc. Report (1988), 41–5.
  • BONYTHON, ELIZABETH. South Kensington: the French connection. R.S.A. Jour., CXXXVII no. 5348 (1989), 657-9. [ French influence on Victoria and Albert Museum.]
  • BOWERS, FAITH. Religion amongst the proprieties of life: George M'Cree and the Bloomsbury Domestic Mission. Baptist Quart., XXXII' (1989), 29-37.
  • BURNBY, JUANITA. Early influences in the life of Isaac D'Israeli. In Heritage No. 3: an historical series on the Jewish inhabitants of North London (Edmont. H.H.S. Jewish Research Group, 1988), 41-5. (Father of Benjamin.]
  • BUSCO, MARIE F. The ‘Achilles’ in Hyde Park. Burlington Mag., CXXX (1988), 920-4. [ Statue, by Sir Richard Westmacott.]
  • CALCRAFT, MAIIU. Robert Browning 's London. (Browning Society Notes, 19,1989). 134 pp., illus. [Centenary issue of periodical.]
  • CHENEY, MALCOLM. A chronicle of the damned. Family Tree Mag., V (1989), 4-5. [ Extracts from diary of Mr. Baker, a visitor to Newgate prison, 1823-4.]
  • CLARK, JOHN G. London `outvoters'. Cockney Ancestor, XLV (1989-90), 2-7.
  • COLLINS, JUNE. The musical Collins? Woolwich & District Fam. Hist. Soc. Jour., no. 35 (1989), 3-6. [ Members of family played in Woolwich band in 19th century.]
  • CORNFORTH, JOHN. Arabian nights in the Mall. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 246-9. [ Decor by Owen Jones in no. 16, Carlton House Terrace.]
  • COX, COLLEEN A. Good pub guide, 1851-81. Ruislip, Northwood and Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour. (1989), 1-6.
  • CRUICKSHANK, DAN. Gwilt complex. Archit. Rev., CLXXXV (1989), 55-61. [Early 19th cent. dock
  • DAUNTON, MARTIN J. Inheritance and succession in the City of London in the 19th century. Business Hist., XXX (1988), 269-86. [ Reflections on Bagehot's claim in 1870 that London lacked 'great families of merchant princes'.]
  • DAUNTON, MARTIN J. Firm and family in the City of London in the 19th century: the case of F. G. Dalgety. Hist. Research, LXIII (1989), 154-77. [ Merchant family.]
  • DAVIS, TRACEY. Actresses and prostitutes in Victorian London. Theatre Research Internat., XIII (1988), 221-34.
  • DAVIS, PETER. The Pneumatic railway: what it was and why it was built. Crystal Palace Matters, XXXIV (1989), 21-5. [ Underground passenger line in grounds of Crystal Palace, 1864.]
  • DENNIS, RICHARD J. The geography of Victorian values: philanthropic housing in London, 1840-1900. Jour. Hist. Geog., XV (1989), 40-54.
  • DIX, KENNETH. All change: an East End of London Baptist church in the 19th century. Baptist Quart., XXXIII (1989), 19-29. [ Church in Little Prescot St., later in Commercial St., under pastorship of Charles Storel.]
  • EAMES, GEOFFREY L. Plaistow and endowment lands. The Town of Bromley a century ago.
  • EDWARDS, JOHN. Public transport: from carts to buses. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 16-18.
  • ELLMERS, CHRIS. A 19th century London clock factory: John Moore & Sons, Clerkenwell Close. Tools & Trade, V (1988), 64-95.
  • ENGLANDER, DAVID. Booth's Jews: the representation of Jews and Judaism in Life and Labour of the People in London. Victorian Studies, XXXII (1989), 551-73.
  • FILMER, JOHN L. Bromley Common: the parish of Holy Trinity. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 40-7.
  • FINCH, HAROLD. George Howell 1833-1910: trade unionist and reformer. East London Record, XI (1988),2-9. [M.P. for Bethnal Green North East from 1885.]
  • FORBES, THOMAS R. Coroners' inquisitions from London parishes of the duchy of Lancaster: the Strand, Clapham, Enfield and Edmonton, 1831-83. Jour. Hist. Med., XLIII (1988), 191-203.
  • FOX, CELINA. Gericault's lithographs of the London poor. Print Quart., V (1988),62-6.
  • FREEMAN, ALEX. How the town was run. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 11-15.
  • FROST, KEN. The great flood of 1888. Romford Record, XXI (1989), 6-9.
  • GEDDES-BROWN, LESLIE. Upwardly mobile no-bodies. Country Life, CDOCXII (1988), 228-30. [ On exhibition at Geffrye Museum depicting life of a City clerk at time of the Grossmiths' ‘Diary of a Nobody’.]
  • GLASMAN, JUDY. London synagogues in the late 19th century: design in context. London Jour., XIII (1987-8), 143-55.
  • GREEN, DAVID R. Little Italy in Victorian London: Holborn's Italian community. Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 2-6.
  • GREEN, DAVID R. Distance to work in Victorian London: a case study of Henry Poole, bespoke tailors. Business Hist., OCX (1988), 179-94.
  • GROVES, DAVID. James Hogg, London, and the Royal Lady's Magazine. Library, 6th ser. X (1988), 339-46. [ James Hogg, ‘the Ettrick Shepherd’, visited London in 1832.]
  • HAMLIN, CHRISTOPHER. William Dibdin and the idea of biological sewage treatment. Technol. & Culture, XXIX (1988), 189-218.
  • HARDY, ANNE. Urban famine or urban crisis? Typhus in the Victorian city. Medical Hist., XXXII (1988), 401-25. [ Includes material on London Fever Hospital.]
  • HAWES, DONALD. Dickens and Camden. Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 24-7. [ Local associa-tions.]
  • HAY, STEPHEN. The making of a late-Victorian Hindu: M. K. Ghandi in London, 1888-91. Victorian Studies, XXXIII (1989), 75-98. [ As a law student.]
  • HERIZ-SMITH, SHIRLEY. James Veitch & sons of Exeter and Chelsea, 1853-70. Garden Hist., XVII (1989), 135-53. [ Exeter-based firm, bought Knight & Perry's nursery in King's Road.]
  • HIGGINBOTHAM, ANN ROWELL. Infanticide and ille-gitimacy in Victorian London. Victorian Studies, XXXII (1989), 319-39.
  • HUITSON, RON, and HUITSON, MURIEL. Croydon by gaslight: the story of the provision of a gas supply to Croydon and neighbourhood. Croydon Nat. Hist. & Sci. Soc. Trans., XVIII (1989), 14-27.
  • INNES, BRENDA. New Bromley. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 19-25.
  • JONES, STEPHANIE KAREN. R. Hovenden & Sons Ltd.: a 19th century barber's shop and hairdres-sing business. A study from the archives of the Worshipful Company of Barbers. Business Arc-hives, n.s. VI (1988), 29-38.
  • JONES, STEPHANIE KAREN. The history of the Barbers' Company: a 19th century barber's shop and hairdressing business. St. Giles Cripplegate with St. Luke's Mag., (April 1989), 19-22, (May 1989), 20-2.
  • KELLIHER, WILLIAM HILTON. A stray notebook of miscellaneous writings by Coleridge. British Lib. Jour., XIV (1988), 136-53. [ Includes his associa-tion with no. 3 The Grove, Highgate, home of Dr and Mrs Hames Gillman.]
  • KNOWLDEN, PATRICIA. Bromley Town. In The Town of Bromley a Century ago, Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 3-10.
  • ROGER, ALICIA KAE. ‘Hyder Ali; or the Lions of Mysore’: The Adelphi challenges Drury Lane. Theatre Notebook, XLIII (1988), 118-23.
  • LAKE, BRIAN. The Blackwell tunnel. Woolwich & District Fam. Hist. Soc. Jour., no.35 (1989), 6-9.
  • LE MAY KEITH. Francis Adrien Le May, 1822-1902: the life and background of a humble silk weaver. Cockney Ancestor, XLI (1988-9), 2-9.
  • LEVY, MARTIN. George Bullock 's partnership with Charles Fraser, 1813-18, and the stock-in-trade sale, 1819. Furniture Hist., XXV (1989), 145-213. [ Colonel Fraser of E. India Co. financed Bullock, cabinet maker at 4 Tenterden St., Hanover Sq.]
  • MAGUIRE, HUGH F. B. The architect of the Garrick Theatre, London. Theatre Notebook, XLIII (1988), 123-6. [ Walter Emden.]
  • MANN, MICHAEL ASHLEY. The Corps of Invalids. Soc. Army Hist. Research Jnl., LXVI (1988), 5-19. [ Recruited from Royal Hospital, Chelsea, for garrison duties.]
  • MARTIN, F. L'image de Londres chez Dickens et Gustave Dore: Bleak House et London, A Pil-grimage. Cahiers Victoriens & Edouardiens, XXVIII (1988), 25-38.
  • MASON, S. C. w. East Ham's relationship with central government at the end of the 19th century. East London Record, XI (1988), 27-33.
  • MCCABE, IRENA M. The physicians CUM natural philosophers at the Royal Institution, 1799-1840. Royal Inst. Proc., LX (1988), 99-118.
  • MCCIUMMON, BARBARA. W. R. S. Ralston (1828-89): scholarship and scandal in the British Museum. British Lib. Jour., XIV (1988), 178–98.
  • MILES, FRANK. Boys' own artist. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 80-3. [ John Sell Cotman was drawing master at King's College School for 8 years.]
  • MILLS, MARY. George Livesey. London's Indust-rial Archaeology, IV (1989), 41-8. [ Chairman of South Metropolitan Gas Light & Coke Co. from 1881.]
  • MORSON, A. F. P. An eminent Bloomsbury pharma-cist: an account of ‘the excellent Mr. Morson’. Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 29-31. [ Tho-mas N. R. Morson, 1799-1872, premises at 19 Southampton Row.]
  • MUNSON, JAMES. Objections overruled. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 172-3. [ Sir William Hamo Thornycroft's statue of Oliver Cromwell outside Westminster Hall, 1899.]
  • NEAL, LARRY. The rise of a financial press: London and Amsterdam, 1681-1810. Business Hist., XXX (1988), 163-78.
  • NUDING, GERTRUDE PRESCOTT. Portraits for the nation. Hist. Today, XXXIX (1989), 30-6. [ Debates on founding of National Portrait Gal-lery, 1850s.]
  • NYE, PHYLISS. John Butt, pianoforte maker. Cock-ney Ancestor, XLIV (1989), 3-6.
  • O'DAY, ROSEMARY. Interviews and investigations: Charles Booth and the making of the Religious influences Survey. History, LXXIV (1989), 361-77.
  • PAYNE, BRENDA. Joseph Myatt, market gardener, 1772-1855, N. W. Kent Family Hist., V (1989), 83-6. [ Nursery at Manor Farm, Deptford.]
  • VAN DER MERWE, PIETER. The staffing and finance of a minor theatre c. 1827. Theatre Notebook, XLIII (1989), 100-4. [ Probably Surrey Theatre in Lambeth, run by Robert Elliston.]
  • PORTER, DALE H., and CLIFTON, GLORIA C. Patron-age, professional values and Victorian public works: engineering and contracting the Thames embankment. Victorian Studies, VOCI (1988), 319-49.
  • Pons, ALEX. Picturing the modern metropolis: images of London in the 19th century. Hist. Workshop, no. 26 (1988), 28-56.
  • PULLEN, DORIS E. Record and Journal. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 32-4.
  • REED, JOHN SHELTON. ‘Ritualism rampant in east London’: Anglo-Catholicism and the urban poor. Victorian Studies, XXXI (1988), 375-403.
  • RIVEIT, GEOFFREY. The London hospitals, princi-ples and problems. Hist. Nursing Grp. Roy. Coll. Nursing Bull., II no. 7 (1989), 1-15.
  • ROBERTS, M. J. D. Public and private in early 19th century London: the Vagrant Act of 1822 and its enforcement. Social Hist., XIII (1988), 273-94.
  • SHAW, HERBERT. The Blunt House estate. Croydon Nat. Hist. & Sci. Soc. Trans., XVII (1989), 263-8.
  • SPEAIGHT, GEORGE. Astley's Amphitheatre. Theatre Notebook, XLII (1988), 75-8.
  • SPICKER, PAUL, and WOLMUTH, PHILIP. Victorian values: living on the margins. Roof, XIV (1989), 38-41. [ Charles Booth's study of London poor reconsidered, with special reference to Covent Garden area.]
  • STINCHCOMBE, OWEN. Elizabeth Mallesen and the Working Women's College: an experiment in women's education. Camden Hist. Rev., XVI (1989), 29-33. [ In Bloomsbury.]
  • THORN, GARY. London bootmaker and the new unionism. London Jour., XIII (1987-8), 17-28.
  • TILL, PAUL H. Varieties of the London Highland Society's Nile medal, 1801. Orders & Medals, XXVIII (1989), 84-91.
  • TURNER, GERALD L 'E. ‘Some curious old instru-ments’: the assembly of the Royal Microscopical Society's collection of microscopes. Jour. of the Hist. of Collections, I (1989), 149-66. [ Founded as the Microscopical Society of London, 1839, Collection now in Oxford.]
  • WALKER, JOYCE. Matters of health. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 16-30. [ Public health and Bromley Cot-tage Hospital.]
  • WATSON, JULIAN. Greenwich at the opening of Queen Victoria's reign. Greenwich & Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1988), 189-94.
  • WILSON, JEAN. Changes in education. The Town of Bromley a century ago. Bromley Local Hist., VIII (1988), 48-57.
  • WINTER, JAMES. The ‘agitator of the metropolis’: Charles Cochrane and early Victorian street reform. London Jour., XIV (1989), 29-42.
  • WRIGHT, BRIAN J. The Royal Exhcange fire, 1838. Fire Mark Circle Jour., no. 19 (1988), 332-4.
  • WRIGHT, C. J. Holland House and the fashionable pursuit of science: a 19th century cabinet of curiosities. Jour, of the History of Collections, I (1989), 97-102. [ Collection of 3rd Lord & Lady Holland.]
  • Death by disaster. Cockney Ancestor, no. 40 (1988), 3-6. [ Sinking of the pleasure steamer Princess Alice in 1878.]
  • AALEN, F. H. A. Lord Meath, city improvement and social imperialism. Planning Perspectives, IV (1989), 127-52. [ LM (1841-1929), originator of green belt idea, & founder of Metropolitan Public Gardens Assoc.]
  • ATKINS, PETER JOSEPH. London directories: a reassessment. Local Historian, XVIII (1988), 187-9. [Directories as source material.]
  • A-rxiNs, P. J. London's suburban directories: 1827—c. 1975. Publishing Hist., XXV (1989), 73-88.
  • BAUM, JEFFRY, and BAUM, BARBARA. Cemeteries, housing and controversies: Montagu Road, Edmonton. In Heritage no. 3: an historical series on the Jewish inhabitants of North London (Edmont. H.H.S. Jewish Research Group, 1988), 3-40.
  • BROOKS, MELVYN H. Notes on the Agapemonites. East London Record, no. 11 (1988), 34-7. [ Aga-pemonite church in Hackney, now known as Cathedral of the Good Shepherd.]
  • CHATFIELD, JUNE. Observations on Croydon and its wildlife by the naturalist and artist F. W. Frohawk (1861-1946) in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Croydon Nat. Hist. & Sci. Soc. Trans., XVIII (1989), 2-13.
  • CORNISH, MAY. St. Bartholomew's church, Bat-tersea, 1891-1971. Wandsworth Historian, no. 58 (1989), 14-17.
  • COX, A. H. The Otter Dock. W. Drayton & District Histn., XCII (1989), 5-8. [ Canal used to transport bricks.]
  • CROOK, J. MORDAUNT, and LAY, DAVID LE. Chelsea churches. 1, St. Luke's: Chelsea's gothic cathed-ral. 2, Christ Church. Chelsea Soc. Report (1988), 46-52.
  • DAVIES, ALUN CHRISTOPHER. The business records of Turner and Birch, 1834-1920: repair and manufacture of watches in London. Antiq. Horol-ogy, XVII (1988), 478-82.
  • DAVIES, PHILIP. Lit by night, viewed by day. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 130-3. [ Street lamp brackets, mainly in London.]
  • DAVIS, JENNIFER. From ‘rookeries’ to ‘communi-ties’: race, poverty and policing in London, 1851-1985. Hist. Workshop, no. 27 (1989), 66-85. [ Compares Jennings' Buildings (Kensington High Street) before 1873 with Broadwater Farm estate in 1980s.]
  • DAVIS, JOAN. Romford Fire Service. Romford Record. No. 20 (1988), 12-18.
  • DEAR, BOB. Thames fishing families. W. Middx. Family Hist. Soc. Jour., VII (1989), 127-31.
  • ENSING, RITA J. From Board of Works of Book House: 100 years. Wandsworth Histn., no. 56 (1988), 15-18. [ East Hill.]
  • FITZGERALD, ROBERT. Employers' labour strate-gies, industrial welfare and the response to new unionism at Bryant and May, 1888-1930. Business Hist., XXXI (1989), 48-65.
  • GREEN, STEPHEN. Another century at Lords. Coun-try Life, CDOOCIII (1989), 238-9. [ Centenary of the pavilion.]
  • HARDY, BRIAN. Piccadilly Circus: the hub of the empire. Underground News, (1989), 236-43. [ His-tory of tube station.]
  • HUMBLE, N. J. Leaving London: a study of two public schools and athleticism, 1870-1914. Hist. of Educ., XVII (1988), 149-62. [ King's College School and Christ's Hospital.]
  • HYDE, RALPH NIGEL. Forsaken fresco: Moorfields panorama. Country Life, CLVOCII (1988), 232-5. [ Panoramic painting by Aglio in St. Mary Moorfields Catholic church.]
  • JACKSON, ALAN A. Railways in and around Wool-wich. Southern Notebook, X (1989), 12-34.
  • JENKINS, J. M. The railways of the Royal Gunpow-der Factory, Waltham Abbey. Industrial Railway Record, no. 117 (1989), 385-415.
  • LEABACK, DAVID HERBERT. Discovery in the East End. East London Record, XII (1989), 2-16.
  • LEECH, KENNETH. MOO-Catholic socialist clergy in east London, 1870-1970. East London Record, no. 12 (1989), 29-37.
  • LOOBEY, PATRICK. The automobile industry in the borough of Wandsworth. Wandsworth Histn., no. 55 (1988), 8-14.
  • MATTHEWS, DEREK. Profit-sharing in the gas indus-try, 1889-1949. Business Hist., XXX (1988), 306-28. [ Includes South Metropolitan Gas Co.]
  • MESSAGE, FRED. The Woolwich R.A.C.S., 1868-1985: a commemorative article on the passing of an institution. Woolwich & District Antiq. Soc. Proc., XXXIX ( 1988), 1-6. [ Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society.]
  • MICHIE, RANALD C. Different in name only? The London Stock Exchange and foreign bourses, c. 1850-1914. Business Hist., XXX (1988), 46-68.
  • MORRIS, SIMON. The London postal districts. Lon-don Topog. Soc. Newsletter, no. 29 (Nov. 1989), 2-7.
  • NEUMANN, MAUREEN. An account of the German Hospital in London. Anglo-German Family Hist. Soc. Mitt., no. 1 (1987), 8-13; no. 2 (1987), 1-2; no. 3 (1988), 1-3; no. 4 (1988), 1-2.
  • PEARL, SUSAN. Worldwide connection: London's German churches. Family Tree Mag., VI no. 2 (1989), 28-9. [ Mainly in ‘Little Germany’ around Whitechapel.]
  • POCOCK, TOM. Reginald Blunt: a man to remem-ber. Chelsea Soc. Report (1988), 19-24. [Founded Chelsea Society, 1927.]
  • RUDDOCK, K. H., and WRIGHT, W. D. A century of visual research at Imperial College, 1886-1986. Opthalm. Physiol. Opt., VIII (1988), 67-95.
  • SAINSBURY, FRANK. The Woolwich free ferry. Essex Jour., XXIV (1989), 19-22.
  • SAINT, ANDREW. Farewell to Fleet Street. Archi-tects' Jour., CLXXXVIII (1988), 32-43.
  • SAMUEL, EDGAR. Decca days: the career of Wilfred Sampson Samuel, 1886-1958. Jewish Hist. Soc. Trans., XXX (1987-8), 21-50.
  • SHERIFF, TOM. The Charing Cross and West End Electricity Supply Co. Ltd., Bow power station. Newcomen Bull., no. 140 (1988), 14-15. [ Com-pany supplied power to City of London.]
  • STAMP, GAVIN. The real King's Cross. Blueprint. no. 44 (1988), 38-41.
  • TAYLOR, ROSEMARY. The story of the Old Five Bells. East London Record, XII (1989), 17-20. [ St. Leonard's Street, Bromley by Bow.]
  • TOWEY, PETER. German sugar bakers in the East End. Anglo-German Family Hist. Soc. Mitt., no. 5 (1988), 3-6.
  • TUCKER, MALCOLM. Bricklayers' Arms Station. London's Industrial Archaeology, IV (1989), 1-23.
  • ADAMSON, HUBERT. Seals in the Vale of Health pond? Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 20-3. [1926 publicity hoax.]
  • BARFF, ALBERT. St. Giles in Edwardian times: the formation of a cricket club. St. Giles Cripplegate with St. Luke's Mag. (June 1989), 20-3. [Reprint of articles from 1904.]
  • CASTLE, HAROLD J. Southfields Defence Force, 1914-18. Wandsworth Histn., no 55 (1988), 1–3.
  • CESARANI, DAVID. The east London of Simon Blumenfeld's ‘Jew Boy’. London Jour., XIII (1987-8), 46-53. [Novel, first pubd. in 1935.]
  • DAGNALL, J. COLIN. The London Foot Hospital, 1911-88: an outline history. Brit. Jour. Chirop., LIII (1988), 185-99.
  • DENNIS, RICHARD J. ‘Hard to let’ in Edwardian London. Urban Studies, XXVI (1989), 46-58. [ L.C.C. housing policy.]
  • DRAIN, JOHN. The arterial road: ‘a scheme to pro-vide employment’. Romford Record, XXI (1989), 10-13.
  • ELSY, MARY. The Langfier Court photographers: the story of 343 Finchley Road. Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 27-8. [ Firm run by Albert Edward Elsy (1889-1939).]
  • FARBEY, HARRY. The Harry Farbey story. In Heritage No. 3: an historical series on the Jewish inhabitants of North London (Edmont. H.H.S. Jewish Research Group, 1988), 65-85. [Mayor of Southgate, 1964-5; includes pre-war.]
  • FREDMAN, HARRY. The legendary Morris Tom-back. In Heritage No. 3: an historical series on the Jewish inhabitants of North London ( Edmont. H.H.S. Jewish Research Group, 1988), 86-93. [Teacher at Tottenham Hebrew Congregation.]
  • FREDMAN, HARRY. Some memories of the Tot-tenham Hebrew Congregation. In Heritage No. 3: an historical series on the Jewish inhabitants of North London ( Edmont. H.H.S. Jewish Research Group, 1988), 94-104.
  • GRANT, ALAN. Sixty years on: the story of the Palmers Green and Southgate Synagogue. In Heritage No. 3: an historical series on the Jewish inhabitants of North London ( Edmont. H.H.S. Jewish Research Group, 1988), 46-64.
  • GREENBERG, ALLAN. Lutyens' Cenotaph. Soc. Archit. Histns. Jour., XLVIII (1989), 5-23.
  • GRIFFITHS, BRONWEN. The Corruganza boxmakers' strike. South London Record, no. 3 (1988), 17-23. [ Aug. 1908.]
  • HEFFER, FRANCES. Memories Of Canning Town. East London Record. XI (1988), 18–26.
  • JACKSON, ALAN ARTHUR CHIRM. The location of the London (Maiden Lane) temporary terminus. G.N.R. Railway & Canal Hist. Soc. Jour. ) 0CIX pt.8 (1989), 391-3.
  • JEFFERSON, E. M. Extract from `Remembrances of my childhood'. Ruislip, Northwood & Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour., (1988), 1-11. [ b. 1916. Northwood.]
  • JENKINS, PETER. The story of Goldsmiths' College. Goldsmiths Rev. (1988-9), 36-9.
  • JENKINS, PHILIP. Before the Krays: organised crime in London, 1920-1960. Criminal Justice Hist., IX (1988), 209-30.
  • KUHNER, DAVID. Herbert Hoover, a London book collector. Antiq. Book Monthly Rev., XV (1988), 168-73. [ Collection of US president, now at Claremont Colleges CA.]
  • LAYTON, RON. Epping Forest and the military during the Great War. Essex Jour., XXIII (1988), 5-8.
  • LOGAN, CONNIE. The opening of the War Memorial Hospital, Woolwich: a childhood memory. Wool-wich & District Antiq. Soc. Proc., XXXIX (1988), 18-21.
  • LOOBEY, PATRICK. Early postcards of Wandsworth. Wandsworth Histn., no. 56 (1988), 5-8.
  • MARRIOTT, JOHN. ‘West Ham: London's Industrial Centre and Gateway to the World’. II Stabiliza-tion and Decline, 1910-39. London Jour., XIV (1989), 43-58.
  • MICHIE, RANALD C. DUNN, Fischer & Co. in the City of London, 1906-14. Business Hist., XXX (1988), 195-218. [ Small investment bank.]
  • MILLER, MERVYN. The elusive green background: Raymond Unwin and the Greater London Regional Plan. Planning Perspectives, IV (1989), 15-44.
  • MUINZER, GENEVIEVE. Monarchs and margarine. Country Life, CLXXXII (1988), 239-40. [ Con-tents of deposit boxes stored by customers of Coutts' Bank.]
  • O'DAY, ROSEMARY. Retrieved riches: Charles Booth's life and labour of the people of London. Hist. Today, XXXIX (1989), 29-35. [ Reinvestiga-tion of data collected by pioneer social scientist.]
  • PANAYI, PANIKOS. Anti-German riots in London during the first World War. German Hist., VII (1989), 184-203.
  • SHACKELL, DENISE, and COX, COLLEEN. Northwood High Street. Ruislip, Northwood & Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour., (1988), 12–19.
  • SHIPLEY, STAN. The east end family during the first world war. Romford Record, XXI (1989), 14-24.
  • SMITH, DENIS (ed.). A. Sindall: textile trimming manufacturer, Dalston. An interview with Mr. Cecil Sindall. London's Industrial Archaeology, IV (1989), 24-31. [ Produced trimmings for coro-nations etc.]
  • SYKES, A. H. A. D. Waller and the University of London Physiological Laboratory. Medical Hist., XXXIII (1989), 217-34.
  • VINCENT, SAM. A Bethnal Green childhood. East London Record, no. 12 (1989), 21-8. [ 1930s.]
  • VOISEY, F. A collision at Vauxhall, 1912. South Western Circular, VIII (1989), 65-9.
  • WAUGH, MAUREEN. Family bakers in Camden: recollections from Soho. Camden Hist. Rev., XVI (1989), 17-19.
  • WEAVER, CYNTHIA. Enid Marx: designing fabrics for the London Passenger Transport Board in the 1930s. Jour. of Design Hist. 11 (1989), 35-46.
  • WEST, ENID. A hospital nurse, 1935-40. Hist. Nursing Grp. Roy. Coll. Nursing Bull., II no. 6 (1988), 36-46. [ In a London teaching hospital.]
  • WOOLVEN, ROBIN. Air raid precautions in St. Pancras, 1935-45: the borough against the Ger-man Air Force. Camden Hist. Rev., XVI (1989), 20-5. [ Much pre-1939.]
  • ALLEN, ROY. Shepherd's Well: Hampstead's early fresh water source. Camden Hist. Rev., no. 15 (1988), 7-9.
  • ANDREWS, MARTIN. London's fountains. Land-scape Design, no. 182 (July—Aug. 1989), 9-12.
  • ATKINS, PETER JOSEPH. The compilation and relia-bility of London directories. London Jour., XIV (1989), 17-28.
  • BERRY, ELIZABETH KATHLEEN. The Local Govern-ment Act, 1985, and the archive services of the Greater London Council and the metropolitan county councils. Soc. Archivists Jour., IX (1988), 119-47.
  • BOWLT, COLIN. Discoveries at Bury Farm, Ruislip: the story of a house through the ages. Ruislip, Northwood & Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour., (1988), 26-3 0.
  • BOWLT, EILEEN M. Bury Farm. Ruislip, Northwood & Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour., (1989), 35–9.
  • BOWLT, EILEEN M. Beetonswood Farm and Ick-enham Green. Ruislip, Northwood & Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour., (1989), 22–7.
  • CAMPBELL, KATHLEEN ELEANOR. Organists of St. Katharine Cree church. The Organ, LXVII (1988), 121-5.
  • CHAPPELL, BRIAN. A large and stately house. London Soc. Jour., no. 416 (1988), 5-7. [ Cecil House, Hotel Cecil and Shell-Mex House, occu-pants of same site at different times.]
  • CLARK, GILLIAN. London nurse children: a source of female employment in the rural domestic economy between 1540 and 1750. Genealogists' Mag ., XXIII (1989), 97-101.
  • COOK, ROBERT. Fulham. West Middx. Family Hist. Soc. Jour., VII (1988), 100-5.
  • CORNFORTH, JOHN. The oldest public library. Country Life, CLXXXII (1988), 220-3. [ Lambeth Palace.]
  • ETHERINGTON, PETER. Tracing a Jewish family in east London. Cockney Ancestor, no. 43 (1989), 17-21.
  • FILDES, VALERIE. The English wet-nurse and her role in infant care, 1538-1800. Medical Hist., XXXII (1988), 142-73. [ London nurse-children in Hertfordshire.]
  • FISHER, JAMES F. The buildings and treasures of the Society of Apothecaries. Ancient Monuments Soc. Trans., XXXIII (1989), 1-21.
  • FREEMAN, JOHN. Insiders' London. Illus. London News, CCLXXVII no. 7090 (1989), 27-34. [ Unusual interiors of London buildings.]
  • GARROD, DEREK. Research into the Deptford potteries. Kent Archaeol. Rev., no. 97 (1989), 158-66.
  • GERHOLD, DOIUAN. The growth of the London carrying trade, 1681-1838. Econ. Hist. Rev., 2nd ser. XLI (1988), 392-410. [ Based on lists of carriers taken from London directories.]
  • GERHOLD, DORIAN. Roehampton chapel. Wands-worth Histn., no. 56 (1988), 1-4.
  • GLENNIE, PAUL. In search of agrarian capitalism: manorial land markets and the acquisition of land in the Lea valley. Continuity & Change, III (1988), 11-40.
  • GOLLAND, JIM. `Compell'd to weep. . .‘: the apprenticeship system. Genealogists’ Mag., XXIII (1989), 121-7.
  • HARDWICK, J. DAVID. The bells of St. Martin's [-in-the-Fields.] Royal Instn. of G.B. Proc., LXI (1989), 205-28.
  • HARDY, ANNE. Diagnosis, death and diet: the case of London, 1750-1909. Jour. Interdisc. Hist., XVIII (1988), 387-401.
  • HENDERSON, JOHN N. The Museum Tavern in Bloomsbury: the history of a famous public house. Camden Hist. Rev., XVI (1989), 5-9.
  • HILTON, CLAIRE. St. Bartholomew's Hospital, Lon-don and its Jewish connections. Jewish Hist. Studies, XXX (1987-8), 21-50.
  • HOLMES, SUE. Rubbish disposal. Woolwich & District Family Hist. Soc. Jour., no. 34 (1989), 7-9.
  • HUMPHRAYS, HARRY. St. Giles Cripplegate. London Soc. Jour., no. 417 (1989), 6-10.
  • JEFFERY, PAUL, and JEFFERY, SALLY. With tower to follow. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 202-8. [ St. Mary's church, Rotherhithe.]
  • LE LIEVRE, AUDREY. Capital Orchards. Country Life, CLXXXIII (1989), 182-6. [ London's sources of fruit and vegetables.]
  • LOUW, H. J. Demarcation disputes between the English carpenters and joiners from the 16th to the 18th century. Construction Hist., V (1989), 3-20. [ Much on London carpenters.]
  • MCCABE, IRENA MARIA. The Royal Institution and its library. Royal Instn. of G.B. Proc., LXI (1989), 283-90.
  • NEAL, LARRY. The rise of a financial press: London and Amsterdam, 1681-1810. Business Hist., XXX (1988), 163-78.
  • PANAYI, PANIKOS. The immigrant experience in London. London Jour., XIV (1989), 71-5. [ Review article.]
  • PRUDAMES, ANNE. ‘Londoners shall have HO king but their mayor’. North Middx. Family Hist. Soc. Jour., XI no. 4 (1989), 97-100. [ On the office of Lord Mayor.]
  • SALUJA, P. G. The incidence of spina bifida occulta in a historic and a modern London population. Jour. Anat., CLVIII (1988), 91-3. [18th and 20th centuries.]
  • SAVAGE, NICHOLAS. The Academicians' library: a selection, not a collection. Apollo, CXXVIII (1988), 258-63. [ Royal Academy.]
  • SHAW, HERBERT. A Croydon brewery. Croydon Nat. Hist. & Sci. Soc. Trans., XVII (1989), 249-62. [ Nalder & Colyer.]
  • TEMPEST, PAUL. Black and white: to be or not to be? The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street, LXV no. 274 (1989), 61-4. [ Nightly watch in Bank of England and associated legends.]
  • TSUSHIMA, JEAN. News from the archives, 1689-1989. Honourable Artillery Co. Jour., LXVI (1989), 90-3. [ About the Honourable Artillery Company.]
  • WALTON, CHRIS. Broker to the Bank of England: a short history of the Mocatta dynasty. Goldsmiths Rev. (1988-9), 10-17. [Mocatta family business from late 17th century. Partnership with the Goldsmids, 1779. Now part of Standard Char-tered Bank.]
  • YOUNSON, ERIC. Three chronometers or one? Royal Inst. Proc., LX (1988), 223-32. [ Scientific Instrument Makers' Company.]
  • >The Sons of Vulcan: a short history of the Worshipful Company of Blacksmiths. Root & Branch, I no. 1 (1989).
  • Archives and collections: the Archive of Art and Design. Jour. of Design Hist., 11 (1989), 293-7. [ At V. & A.; highlights material on Heal & Sons.]

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.