Publication Cover
The London Journal
A Review of Metropolitan Society Past and Present
Volume 16, 1991 - Issue 2
28
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Periodical Articles on London History, 1990

Pages 174-191 | Published online: 18 Jul 2013

LIST OF ARTICLES

  • ATKINS, P. J. The spatial configuration of class solidarity in London's west end, 1792-1939. Urban Hist. Yearbook, (1990), 36-65.
  • BAKER, R. V. The cut. Wandsworth Historian, no.59 (1990), 1-3. [ Canal in Wandsworth.]
  • BILLINGTON, SANDRA. Butchers and fishmongers: their historical contribution to London's festivity. Folklore, CI pt.1 (1990), 97-103.
  • BOULTON, JEREMY. London widowhood revisited: the decline of female remarriage in the 17th and early 18th centuries. Continuity and Change, V (1990), 323-55.
  • BOWLE, EILEEN M. The priory restaurant and the Ruislip village trust property, nos.5-15 High Street. Ruislip, Northwood and Eastcote Local Hist. Soc. Jour., (1990), 7-12.
  • BROWN, BERNARD. ‘Damn Yankees’ and ‘the Met’, 1829-1986: the evolution of the ‘Y’ District Police Force. Haringey Hist. Bull., no.29 (1988), 30-3.
  • CORNFORT'H, JOHN. Changing City. Country Life, CLXXXIV no.50 (1990), 50-2. [ City of London in maps.]
  • COX, RONALD. Captain Shaw: the first and most famous chief of the London Fire Brigade. Lewisham Local Hist. Soc. Trans. (1987-8), 8-30.
  • CRAWFORD, DAVID. London's historic offices. London Topog. Soc. Newsletter, no.30 (1990), 2-5.
  • CROUZET, F. at. Walloons, Huguenots and the Bank of England. Huguenot Soc. London Proc., XXV (1990), 167-78.
  • DAKIN, JENNY. Changes in Suttons manor over the centuries. Havering Hist. Rev., no.11 (1990), 29-34. [ Hornchurch.]
  • DOUGLAS, GINA. History of science and technology resources at the Linnean Society of London. British Jour. Hist. Sci., XXI (1988), 489-93.
  • EASTLEIGH, ROBERT L. The other Woolwich ferry. Bygone Kent, IX (1988), 635-9.
  • FUENTES, NICHOLAS. The western boundary of early Battersea. Wandsworth Historian, no.59 (1990), 4-13.
  • FUENTES, NICHOLAS. Crossing points of the Thames at Putney. Wandsworth Historian, no.57 (1989), 7-14.
  • GADSBY, JOYCE. The history of Kingswood, Sanderstead. Local History Records [Bourne Society] , XXVII (1988), 4-11.
  • GARDAM, C. M. L. ‘Restorations of the Temple church’. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeology in London, ed. L. M. GRANT (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 101-17.
  • GARSIDE, PATRICIA L. `London and the Home Counties'. In The Cambridge social history of Britain, 1750-1950. Vol.1, Regions and communities, ed. F. M. L. Thompson ( Cambridge U.P., 1990), 471-574.
  • GEARY, LAURENCE, M. O'COIMOTite Bedlam: Feargus and his grand-nephew, Arthur. Medical Hist., XXXIV (1990), 125-43. [ Feargus was an M.P., Arthur a would-be assassin of Queen Vic-toria; both were committed to mental asylums in London.]
  • GERHOLD, DORIAN. Roehampton detached. Wandsworth Historian, no.60 (1990), 1-3.
  • GOVE, SHEILA. London landmarks: the Royal Hospital and National Army Museum. Port of London, LXV (1990), 64-7.
  • GOWER, GRAHAM. Some observations on the Bat-tersea boundary through West Streatham. Wand-sworth Historian, no.58 (1989), 9-13.
  • HASLAM, RICHARD. Somerset House, London, and the Courtauld Institute. Country Life, CLXXXIV no.25 (1990), 114-17.
  • HASLAM, RICHARD. Lambeth Palace, London. Country Life, CLXXXIV no.42 ( 1990), 158-61; no.43 (1990), 76-9.
  • HOPE, VALERIE. Eight hundred years of the mayoralty. Root and Branch, I no.1 (1989), 6-12.
  • JACKSON-STOPS, GERVASE. Spencer House, London. Country Life, CLXXXIV no.48 (1990), 42-7.
  • JAMES, H. A. and TESTER, P. J. Notes on the brasses in East Wickham church. Archaeol. Cantiana, CVII (1989), 382-90.
  • JEFFREE, RICHARD. The Gibson family of artists. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., XI (1989), 17-28. [ Active in London.]
  • JEFFREE, RICHARD. The milestones of Richmond-upon-Thames. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., XI (1990), 21-9.
  • KEYMER, FAITH. Members of the Watermen and Lightermen's Company. Woolwich and District Family Hist. Soc. Jour., no.31 (1988), 8-12; no.32 (1988), 8-11.
  • LONG, IRIS J. Rummens family. Pinner Local Hist. Soc. Newsletter, no.50 (1989), 28-31,37. [Especi-ally Francis Rummens, 1811-93.]
  • MACHIN, G. JEFFREY. The Westminster Free Day Infant Asylum: the origins of the first English infant school. Jour. Educ. Admin. and Hist., XX no.2 (1988), 43-56. [ Opened at Brewer's Green, 1819.]
  • MAKEPIECE, MARGARET. Sources for London history at the India Office Library and Records. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 153-76.
  • MATTHEWS, BETRY. Organs of the London concert halls. Organ, LXVII (1988), 53-60. [ Includes material on the history of the halls.]
  • MCKELLS, JANE. The ghosts of the College of Arms. Coat of Arms, n.s., VIII no.152 (1990), 306-14. [ With appendix of officers, staff and families buried at St Benet, Paul's Wharf.]
  • MILLBURN, JOHN R. Patent agents and the New-tons in 19th-century London. Scientific Instru-ment Soc. Bull., no.20 (1989), 3-6. [ Newton family of Chancery Lane and Fleet Street.]
  • MILLS, J. P. F. Two Uxbridge houses: ‘The Lawn’ and ‘The Shrubbery’. Uxbridge Record, no.53 (1990), 2-6; no.54 (1990), 5-11. [ Nos. 213 and 222 High Street, Uxbridge.]
  • MOORE, RICHARD. Are you kin to John and Frances West. Berks. Family Historian, XIII no.2 (1990), 38-41. [ Established charities to help their descendants, including scholarships to Chr-ist's Hospital.]
  • MORRIS, DEREK. Stepney and Trinity House. East London Record, no.13 (1990), 33-8.
  • NAGGAR, BETTY. Old-clothes men: 18th and 19th centuries. Jewish Hist. Studies, XXXI (1988-90), 171-91.
  • NEWBURY, KEN. Coulsdon and Purley road names. Local History Records [Bourne Society] , XXVII (1988), 28-30.
  • PASK, ERIC. The organ in Enfield parish church. The Organ, LXVIII (1989), 3-24.
  • PEARCE, K. R. No. 132 High Street, Uxbridge. Uxbridge Record, no.53 (1990), 14-17.
  • PRICE, ROY. Old Palace Lane: a brief history. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., IX (1988), 49-56.
  • REILLY, JOAN. The Theatre Royal, Richmond Green, 1765-1884. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., IX (1988), 41–8.
  • REILLY, LEONARD. The 19th century development of New Town, Deptford. Greenwich and Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1990), 289-304.
  • ROBERTS, HUGH. Metamorphoses in wood: royal library furniture in the 18th and 19th centuries. Apollo, CXXXI (1990), 382-90. [ For the libraries at Buckingham and Carlton Houses.]
  • RODRIGUES-PEREIRA, MIRIAM. Relations of the Mahadad of the Spanish and Portuguese Congre-gation of London with the Holy Land in the 19th century. Jewish Hist. Studies, XXXI (1988-90), 197-229.
  • SAGUES, Liz. George Potter (1837-1927): an anti-quarian collector. Victorian Values, aspects of a legacy: Homsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.31 ( 1990), 34-7. [ Of Highgate.]
  • SARGENT, ANDREW. The greater London excava-tion index. London Archaeologist, VI (1990), 216-21.
  • SCHOFIELD, JOHN. ‘Medieval and tudor domestic buildings in the City of London’. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeology in London, ed. L. M. Grant (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 16-28.
  • SHERWOOD, PHILIP. Heathrow before the airport. Hayes and Harlington Local Hist. Soc. Jour., no.37 (1988), 7–15.
  • SMITH, DAVID. George Frederick Cruchley, 1796-1880. Map Collector, no.49 (1989), 16-22. [ London map publisher.]
  • SPENCER-SILVER, PATRICIA. George Myers, 1803-75, stonemason, builder, contractor. Construc-tion Hist., V (1989), 47-57. [ Of Ordnance Wharf, Lambeth.]
  • STANNARD, KEVIN P. Ideology, education and social structure: elementary schooling in Mid-Victorian England. Hist. Educ., XIX (1990), 105-22. [ Includes material on Deptford and Greenwich.]
  • STATT, DANIEL. The City of London and the controversy over immigration, 1660-1772. Hist. J our ., )(XXIII (1990), 45-61.
  • SWIFT, KATHERINE. ‘The French booksellers in the Strand’: Huguenots in the London book trade, 1685-1730. Huguenot Soc. London Proc., XXV (1990), 123-39.
  • TAYLOR, GORDON C. The Bloomsbury Dispensary then and now. Pharmaceutical Historian, XX (March 1990), 2-5.
  • THOMAS, J. HYWEL. The pre-clinical departments at UMDS. St Thomas's Hospital Gazette, ( Spring 1990), 8-14. [History of the United Medical and Dental Schools of Guy's and St Thomas's, which began to merge in 1982.]
  • TYACK, GEOFFREY CHRISTOPHER. `A gallery worthy of the British people': James Pennethome's designs for the National Gallery, 1845-67. Archit. Hist., XXXIII (1990), 120-34.
  • VAUGHAN, JACK. The stones of Shooters Hill. Aspects of Shooters Hill, no.2 (1989), 5-22. [ Stones and other markers.]
  • VENISON, TONY. Capital pastime recorded. Country Life, CLXXXIV no. 19 (1990), 100-103. [ London's gardens.]
  • WALLACE, JANET. The central archives of the British Museum. Archives, XIX (1990), 213-23.
  • WATSON, ISOBEL. The French Protestant Hospital. The Terrier, no.13 (1988), 8-11.
  • WEBB, DAVID. Guide books to London before 1800: a survey. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 138-52.
  • BADHAM, SALLY F. London standardisation and provincial idiosyncrasy: the organisation and working practices of brass-engraving workshops in pre-Reformation England. Church Monu-ments, V (1990), 3-25.
  • BAILEY, KEITH. Putney or not Putney. Wand-sworth Historian, no.60 (1990), 4-5. [ Origins of the name.]
  • BARRON, CAROLINE. London and parliament in the Lancastrian period. Parliamentary Hist., IX (1990), 343-67.
  • BINSKI, PAUL. The Cosmati at Westminster and the English court style. Art Bull., LXXII (1990), 6-34.
  • BRESLOW, BOYD. London merchants and the orig-ins of the House of Commons. Medieval Pro-sopography, X no.1 (1989), 51-80.
  • CHERRY, BRIDGET. `New types of late medieval tombs in the London area'. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeology in London, ed. L. M. Grant, (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 140-54.
  • CHRISTIANSON, C. PAUL. ‘Evidence for the study of London's late medieval manuscript book trade’. In Book production and publishing in Britain, 1375-1475, ed. J. Griffiths and D. Pearsall ( Cam-bridge U.P., 1989), 87-108.
  • CLARK, ELAINE. City orphans and custody laws in medieval England. American Jour. of Legal Hist., XXXIV (1990), 168-87. [ London and Bristol.
  • CLARK, JOHN. Some Medieval smiths' marks. Tools and Trades, V (1988), 10-22. [ Authorised by the London Blacksmiths, c.1370-1410.]
  • CLOAKE, JOHN. The early history of Ham. Rich-mond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., XI (1990), 2-10.
  • COURTENAY, LYNN T. The Westminster Hall roof: a new archaeological source. British Archaeol. Assoc. Jour., CXLIII (1990), 95-111. [ Considers the evidence of drawings made during its restora-tion, 1913-22.]
  • DENNISON, LYNDA. “Liber Horn”, “Liber Custumarum” and other manuscripts of the Queen Mary psalter workshop'. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeology in London, ed., L. M. Grant (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 118-34.
  • DYSON, ANTHONY GEORGE. King Alfred and the restoration of London. London Jour., XV (1990), 99-110.
  • EMMERSON, ROBIN. Design for mass production: monumental brasses made in London c.1420-85. Artistes, artisans et production artistique au Moyen-Age, III (1990), 133-71.
  • FUENTES, NICHOLAS. A lighthouse for Roman London? London Archaeologist, VI (1990), 208-15. [ Suggests that either present Bell Tower or Lanthom Tower at Tower of London may be its successor.]
  • GEM, RICHARD. ‘The Romanesque architecture of old St Paul's cathedral and its 11th century con-text’. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeo-logy in London, ed., L. M. Grant (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 47-63.
  • HAWKINS, DUNCAN. The Black Death and the new London cemeteries of 1348. Antiquity, LXIV (1990), 637-42.
  • LINDBAUM, SHEILA. The Smithfield tournament of 1390. Jour. Medieval and Renaissance Studies, XX (1990), 1-20.
  • MACLEOD, RODERICK. The topography of St Paul's precinct, 1200-1500. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 1-14.
  • MARTIN, G. H. The early history of the London Saddlers' Guild. John Rylands Lib. Bull., LXXII (1990), 145-54.
  • MASON, EMMA. Westminster Abbey and the monarchy between the reigns of William I and John (1066-1216). Jour. Eccles. Hist., XLI (1990), 199-216.
  • MAURER, HELEN. Bones in the Tower: a discussion of time, place and circumstance. Ricardian, VIII (1990), 474-93. [ Were children's bones found in Tower those of Richard III's nephews? Article concluded in IX (1991), 2-22.]
  • MAZO, RUTH. The regulation of brothels in later medieval England. Signs, XIV (1989), 399-433. [ Mainly London.]
  • MCALEER, J. PHILIP. ‘The first façade of old St Paul's cathedral: did it have flanking towers’. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeology in London, ed., L. M. Grant (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 64-73.
  • MERRIFIELD, RALPH. ‘The contribution of archaeo-logy to our understanding of pre-Norman London’. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeology in London, ed., L. M. Grant (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 1-15.
  • MILNE, GUSTAV, and GOODBURN, DAMIAN N. Saxon boats of London. Context, no.3 (April 1990), 22-5.
  • MILNE, GUSTAV, and GOODBURN, DAMIAN. The early medieval port of London, 700-1200. Anti-quity, LXIV (1990), 629-36.
  • MORRIS, RICHARD K. `The new work at old St Paul's cathedral and its place in English 13th-century architecture'. In Medieval art, architec-ture and archaeology in London, ed., L. M. Grant (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 74-100.
  • NIGHTINGALE, PAMELA. Monetary contraction and mercantile credit in later medieval England. Econ. Hist. Rev., 2nd ser. XLIII (1990), 560-75. [ Analysis of Chancery certificates of debt relating to London grocers.]
  • OSBERG, RICHARD. The Lambeth Palace manu-script account of Henry VI's 1432 London entry. Medieval Studies, LII (1990), 255-67.
  • PARSONS, JOHN CARMI. Towards a history of the English court: the Senches of London, 1246-1349. Medieval Prosopography, IX no.2 (1988), 51-71.
  • PEARCE, DAVID. Clues written in wood. Country Life, CLXXXIV no.52 (1990), 40-2. [ Harmond-sworth Barn.]
  • SLOANE, BARNEY. Archaeology in Hackney: the hunt for Holywell Priory. The Terrier, no.17 (1990), 2-3.
  • SUTTON, ANNE FRANCES. The early linen and worsted industries of Norfolk and the evolution of the London Mercers' Company. Norfolk Archaeol., XL (1989), 201-25.
  • TAYLOR, PAMELA. Clerkenwell and the religious foundations of Jordan de Bricett: a re-examina-tion. Hist. Research, LXIII (1990), 17-28.
  • WALLIS, PENELOPE. ‘London, Londoners and Opus Anglicanum’. In Medieval art, architecture and archaeology in London, ed., L. M. Grant (British Archaeol. Assoc. Conference Trans., 10. The Association, 1990), 135-9. [Embroidery.]
  • WATSON, MARK. Stratford Langthorne Abbey restored. Essex Jour., XXIV (1989), 33-7. [ Cistercian Abbey.]
  • ALSOP, J. D. Revolutionary puritanism in the parishes? The case of St Olave, Old Jewry. London Jour., XV (1990), 29-37.
  • ARCHER, MICHAEL. Richard Butler, glass-painter. Burlington Mag., CXXXII (1990), 308-15. [Pro-vided stained glass for Lincoln's Inn Chapel, 1623J
  • BAILEY, KEITH. Further observations on the Reformation in Wandsworth and Battersea. Wandsworth Historian, no.59 (1990), 19-21.
  • BERGERON, DAVID M. Patronage of dramatists: the case of Thomas Heywood. English Lit. Renaissance, XVIII (1988), 294-304. [ Heywood was author of Lord Mayor's shows, & patronised by the guilds.]
  • BUCKLAND, J. S. P. Technical notes on 16th and 17th century London windmills. Newcomen Soc. Trans., LX (1988-9), 127-36.
  • CARLIN, MARTHA. Four plans of Southwark in the time of Stow. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 15-56.
  • CLIFFORD, HELEN. Colonel Shorey, citizen and pewterer of London. Pewter Soc. Jour., VII (1990), 130-2.
  • CLOAKE, JOHN. The development of the area between Richmond Hill and the river. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., IX (1988), 2-25.
  • CLOAKE, JOHN. The building of Trumpeter's House. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., IX (1988), 31-9.
  • CUNNINGTON, W. c. The military encampments of James II on Hounslow Heath. Honeslaw Chronicle, XII no.1 (1989), 8-15; no.2 (1990), 21-6.
  • CURTH, LOUSIE HILL. London: Tudor gateway to the world. Port of London, LXV (1990), 98-101.
  • DUTHIE, RUTH. The planting plans of some 17th-century flower gardens. Garden Hist., XVIII (1990), 77-102. [ pp. 86-96 deal with Beaufort House gardens, Chelsea.]
  • EARLE, PETER. Domestic service in the London of Pepys and Defoe. L.S. E. Quart. ( Autumn 1989), 255–66.
  • ECCLES, MARK. Edward Alleyn in London records. Notes and Queries, CCXXXV no.2 (1990), 166-8. [ Actor, and founder of Dulwich College.]
  • EDMOND, MARY. The builder of the Rose Theatre. Theatre Notebook, XLIV (1990), 50-4.
  • FAIRCLOUGH, KEITH. A successful Elizabethan project: the River Lea improvement scheme. Jour. Transport Hist., XI (1990), 54-65.
  • FORSE, JAMES H. Extortion in the name of art in Elizabethan England: the impressment of Thomas Clifton for the Queen's Chapel Boys. Theatre Survey, XXXI (1990), 165-76.
  • FORSE, JAMES H. Art imitates business: profit and business practice as forces in the Elizabethan theatre. Jour. Popular Cult., XXIV no.2 (1990), 165-96. [ Examines the financial activities of London's theatrical personnel.]
  • GARNIER, RICHARD. Striking royal connec-tions. Country Life, CDOOCIV no. 49 (1990), 128-31. [ The royal clocks of Thomas Tompion.]
  • GRELL, OLE PETER. Plague in Elizabethan and Stuart London: the Dutch response. Medical Hist., XXXIV (1990), 424-39.
  • GUILLERY, PETER. The Broadway Chapel, West-minster: a forgotten exemplar. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 97-133. [ Also known as Tothill Fields Chapel.]
  • HARDING, VANESSA. The population of London, 1550-1700: a review of the published evidence. London Jour., XV (1990), 111-28.
  • HARRIS, JOHN. Disneyland in Greenwich: the restoration of the Queen's House. Apollo, XXXII (1990), 256-60. [ Historical background and critical commentary on the recently com-pleted restoration.]
  • HASLAM, RICHARD. The Queen's House, Greenwich. Country Life, CLXXXIV no.19 (1990), 88-91.
  • HEFFORD, WENDY. Introducing James Bridges: new light on an English series of Eucharist tapestries. Arts in Virginia, XXVIII (1988), 34-47. [ From London records.]
  • JACKSON, PETER. Some notes on Holiar's ‘Pros-pect of London and Westminster taken from Lambeth’. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 134-7.
  • LEVY, ELEANOR. Moorfields, Finsbury and the City of London in the 16th century. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 78-96.
  • LOBB, DOUGLAS H. V. The Lobb brothers: wood carvers to the aristocracy. Geneal. Mag., XXIII (1990), 252-6, 285-9. [Worked on London properties.]
  • PRIOR, ROGER. A second Jewish community in Tudor London. Jewish Hist. Studies, XXXI (1988-90), 137-52. [Highlights Jewish musicians.]
  • RADICE, MARK A. Theatre architecture at the time of Purcell and its influence on his 'dramatic operas'. Musical Quart., LXXIV (1990), 98-130. [ Dorset Garden Theatre.]
  • ROSSER, GERVASE,, and THURLEY, SIMON. Whitehall Palace and King Street, Westminster. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 57-77.
  • STOREY, R. L. Ordinations of secular priests in early Tudor London. Nottingham Medieval Studies, XXXIII (1989), 122-33.
  • THURLEY, SIMON. The 16th-century kitchens at Hampton Court. British Archaeol. Assoc. Jour., CXLIII (1990), 1-28.
  • TUDOR, PHILIPPA. Protestant books in London in Mary Tudor's reign. London Jour., XV (1990), 19-28.
  • TvvvcRoss, MEG. Felsted of London: silk-dyer and theatrical entrepreneur. Medieval English Theatre, X (1988), 4-16. [1530s and 40s.]
  • WAINWRIGHT, V. L. Lending to the Lord: Defoe's rhetorical design in ‘A Journal of the Plague Year’. British Jour. Eighteenth Century Studies, XIII (1990), 59-72.
  • WATSON, EDWARD. John Evelyn's house at Sayes Court. Bygone Kent, X (1989), 291-6.
  • WATSON, EDWARD. John Evelyn's great garden at Deptford. Bygone Kent, X (1989), 727-31.
  • WILLEITS, PAMELA JOAN. Stephen Bing: a forgot-ten violist. Chelys: Jour. of the Viola da Gamba Soc., XVIII (1989), 3-17. [ SB was minor canon of St Paul's.]
  • WUNDERLI, RICHARD M. Evasion of the office of alderman in London, 1523-1672. London Jour., XV (1990), 3-18.
  • YORKE, JAMES. French furniture makers at Ham House. Furniture Hist., XXVI (1990), 235-8.
  • APPLEBY, JOHN H. Erasmus King: 18th-century experimental philosopher. Annals of Science, XLVII (1990), 375-92. [ Based on London newspaper advertisements.]
  • AVERY, MARGARET E. Patrick Colquhoun (1745-1820); ‘a being clothed with divinity’. Police Hist. Soc. Jour., no.3 ( 1988), 24-34. [ Metropolitan Police magistrate.]
  • BAKER, WILLIAM. The London Library: a study of its early rules and regulations. Library Rev., XXXVII no.2 (1988), 33-41.
  • BAKER, WILLIAM. J. G. Cochrane and the London Library at Pall Mall. Library Hist., VIII (1990), 171-9.
  • BARNARD, JOHN E. William Barnard, shipbuilder of Deptford, 1763-97. North West Kent Family Hist., V (1990), 243-6.
  • BARROW, VALENTINE K. Charles Dibdin's entertainments. Theatre Notebook, XLIV (1990), 10-16.
  • BARTLE, GEORGE FREDERICK. The Greek boys at Borough Road during the War of Independence. Jour. Educ. Admin. and Hist., XX no.1 (1988), 1-11. [ Greek war of 1812.]
  • BLEDSOE, ROBERT. The ‘Athenaeum’ and the reception of grand opera in London in the 1830s. Victorian Periodicals Rev., XXIII (1990), 3-8.
  • BLEDSOE, ROBERT. Critics and operatic perform-ance practice in London during the 1830s. Vic-torian Rev., XVI (1990), 59-70.
  • BLOCH, HARRY. George Armstrong, 1719-87: founder of the first dispensary for children. American Jour. Diseases of Children, CXLIII (1989), 239–41.
  • BOLTON, IRIS PEROWNE. The Australian wool trade's debt to Kew. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., X (1989), 55-64.
  • BROWN, ROBERT L., and EASTON, STEPHEN A. Weak-form efficiency in the 19th century: a study of daily prices in the London market for 3 Per Cent Consols, 1821-60. Economica, LVI (1989), 61-70.
  • BRYANT, JULIUS. Deciphering Palladian decora-tion. Country Life, CLXXXIV no.16 (1990), 162-3. [ The Great Room at Marble Hill House.]
  • CASAUBON, EDWARD. Extracts from the vestry and other records relating to some mid-18th century building works at Richmond church with a note on the architect. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., X (1989), 29-41.
  • CLOAKE, JOHN. The development of the area between Richmond Hill and the river. 2, The 18th century: the growth of the great houses. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., X (1989), 2-16.
  • DE BELLAIGUE, GEOFFREY. The Crimson Drawing Room, Carlton House. Furniture Hist., XXVI (1990), 10-19.
  • EGAN, MICHAEL. A popish conventicle. Catholic Ancestor, III no.2 (1990), 55-60. [ Purpose-built public chapel at Deptford.]
  • ENSING, IUTA J. West Hill: the making of a noble retreat. Wandsworth Historian, no.60 (1990), 6-19.
  • FINCH, HAROLD. Sir Thomas Buxton, Bt., 1786-1845. East London Record, no.13 (1990), 23-8. [ Social reformer and anti-slavery campaigner, involved in London causes.]
  • GERHOLD, DORIAN. Bears Den Hall, Putney. Wandsworth Historian, no.57 (1989), 19-20. [18th-century print of this building appears in many early histories of Putney and Surrey.]
  • GIBSON, ELIZABETH. Italian opera in London, 1750-1775: management and finances. Early Music, XVIII (1990), 47-59.
  • GREEN, JAMES. Fitzwilliam House or Pembroke Lodge on Richmond Green. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., IX (1988), 57-68. [Demolished 1840.]
  • GRIFFIN, ANDREW. London, Bengal, the China trade and the unfrequented extremities of Asia: the East India Company's settlement in New Guinea, 1793-5. British Lib. Jour., XVI (1990), 151-73.
  • GROVES, DAVID. Thomas Hood, London, and the ‘Edinburgh Literary Gazette’. English Language Notes, XXVII (1990), 34-9.
  • GULLY, CLIFFORD. Dick Turpin in Hackney. East London Record, no.13 (1990), 29-32.
  • HARRIS, EILEEN. Sir John Soane 's library. Apollo, CXXXI (1990), 242-7.
  • HARRIS, EILEEN. Robert Adam 's ornaments for Alderman Boydell's picture frames. Furniture Hist., XXVI (1990), 93-8.
  • HARVEY, CHARLES, and PRESS, JON. The City and mining enterprise: the making of the Morris family fortune. William Morris Soc. Jour., IX (1990), 3-14. [ Family lived at Woodford Hall, then at Water House in Walthamstow.]
  • HORWITZ, HENRY, and BONFIELD, LLOYD. The ‘lower’ branches of the legal profession: a London society of attorneys and solicitors of the 1730s and its ‘moot’. Cambridge Law Jour., XLIX (1990), 461-90.
  • HUME, ROBERT D. The sponsorship of opera in London, 1704-1720. Modern Philol , LXXXV (1988), 420-32.
  • INWOOD, STEPHEN. Policing London's morals: the Metropolitan Police and popular culture, 1829-1850. London Jour., XV (1990), 129-46.
  • JACKSON, PETER. London illustrations in the ‘Gentleman's Magazine’, 1746-1863. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 177-213.
  • JACOBS, DEREK. Some christening and burial stat-istics for Ruislip. Ruislip, Northwood and East-cote Local Hist. Soc. Jour. (1990), 17-23. [ For 1710-50 and 1770-1810.]
  • JEFFERY, SALLY. Pebbles, posts and Purbeck pav-ing: a study of early 18th-century street paving in London, with a gazeteer by Robert Crayford. Assoc. for Studies in the Conservation of Hist. Buildings Trans., XIII (1988), 29-36.
  • KELSALL, FRANK. Cavendish Square. Georgian Grp. Rept.and Jour. (1989), 75–9.
  • KENT, DAVID A. ‘Gone for a soldier’: family break-down and the demography of desertion in a London parish, 1750-91. Local Population Studies, no.45 (1990), 27-42. [ St Martin-in-the-Fields, Westminster.]
  • LANDERS, JOHN. Age patterns of mortality in London during the ‘long eighteenth century’: a test of the ‘high potential’ model of metropolitan mortality. Social Hist. Medicine, III (1990), 27-60.
  • LAXTON, PAUL. Richard Horwood 's Plan of London: a guide to editions and variants, 1792-1819. London Topog. Record, XXVI (1990), 114-63.
  • LE MAY KEITH. The silk weavers of Spitalfields. Cockney Ancestor, no.48 (1990), 7-12.
  • LOCKWOOD, THOMAS. William Hatchett, ‘A Rehearsal of Kings’ (1737) and the Panton Street puppet show (1748). Philol. Studies, LXVIII (1989), 315-23.
  • LOEWE, RALPH, and BROWN, MALCOLM. A ‘miniature sanctuary’ at Clapton House, 1781. Jewish Hist. Studies, XXXI (1988-90), 193-6.
  • MASON, A. STUART. The 1745 parish map of Shoreditch. The Terrier, no.16 (1989), 3-6. [ Created by Peter Chassereau.]
  • MASTERS, COLIN. Thomas Coram Foundation for children. Cockney Ancestor, no.46 (1990), 5-8.
  • MCKINNEY, DAVID D. The castle of my ancestors: Horace Walpole and Strawberry Hill. British Jour. Eighteenth Century Studies, XIII (1990), 199-214.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. The Drury Lane actors' rebellion of 1743. Theatre Jour., XLII (1990), 57-80.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and PRICE, CURTIS. Harp-sichords in the London theatres, 1697-1715. Early Music, XVIII (1990), 38-46.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. John Rich 's Covent Garden account books for 1735-36. Theatre Survey, XXXI (1990), 200-41.
  • MILHOUS, JUDITH, and HUME, ROBERT D. The Marquis de Chabanne's system for heating and ventilation at Covent Garden in 1818. Nineteenth Century Theatre Research, XVII (1989), 50-65.
  • MORTON, A. Q. Lectures on natural philosophy in London, 1750-65: S. C. T. Demainbray ( 1710-82) and the ‘inattention’ of his countrymen. Brit. Jour. Hist. Science, XXIII (1990), 411-34.
  • MULVIHILL, JAMES. The Reverend Edward Irving and London pulpit popularity. Nineteenth-Cen-tury Contexts, XIV (1990), 175-92.
  • NYE, PHYLISS. John Butt, pianoforte maker. Cockney Ancestor, no.44 (1989), 3-6; no.47 (1990), 16-17. [ First appears in 1823-4 directory, at Bethnal Green.]
  • OLLY, JOHN. 20 St James's Square. Archit. Jour., CXCI (21 Feb. 1990), 34-57; ( 28 Feb. 1990), 34-53.
  • PACKHAM, ROGER. Fresh light on Coulsdon's mills. Local Hist. Records [Bourne Soc.] , XXVIII (1989), 5-8.
  • PALEY, RUTH. 'An imperfect, inadequate and wretched system'? Policing London before Peel. Criminal Justice Hist., X (1989), 95-130.
  • PALMER, SUSAN. The papers of Sir John Soane. Apollo, CXXXI (1990), 248-51.
  • PASMORE, STEPHEN. The Countess of Pembroke and Pembroke Lodge, Richmond Park. Rich-mond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., XI (1990), 13-19.
  • PERRY, NORMA. Identifying Helvétius 's London landlord, Egidius Augustinus Van Coppenolle. Studies on Voltaire and the 18th Cent., CCLXVII (1989), 231-52. [ Claude-Adrien H. arrived in London 1764 and lodged in Suffolk St.]
  • PODMORE, COLIN J. The Fetter Lane Society, 1739-40. Wesley Hist. Soc. Proc., XLVII (1990), 156-85.
  • RAVEN, JAMES. The Noble brothers and popular publishing, 1737-89. The Library, XII (1990), 293-345. [ Francis and John Noble, London booksellers, established the two leading circulat-ing libraries for modish literature.]
  • ROSE, CRAIG. London's charity schools, 1690-1730. Hist. Today, XL (March 1990), 17-23.
  • RUDE, GEORGE FREDERICK ELLIOT. The Gordon Riots. Catholic Ancestor, III (1990), 95-100.
  • RUSSELL, GILLIAN. Playing at revolution: the politics of the O.P. riots of 1809. Theatre Note-book, XLIV (1990), 16-26. [‘Old Price’ riots over ticket price rises at Covent Garden.]
  • SAUL, G. M. John Rennie, 1761-1821: one of his contributions to waterworks technology. New-comen Soc. Trans., LIX ( 1987-8), 3-13. [Water supply in London.]
  • SCHNELLER, BEVERLY. Mary Cooper and period-ical publishing, 1743-61. Newspaper and Period-ical Hist. Jour., VI (1990), 31-5. [ London bookseller.]
  • SENELICK, LAURENCE. Mollies or men of mode? Sodomy and the 18th-century London stage. Jour. Hist. Sex. 1 (1990), 33-67.
  • SPARROW, ELIZABETH. The alien office, 1792-1806. Hist. Jour., XXXIII (1990), 361-84. [ The first British secret service in the modern sense, set up as a result of reform in judicial system in London.]
  • THORNTON, PETER. The Soane as it was. Apollo, CXXXI (1990), 228-33. [ Sir John Soane's Museum.]
  • TRUMBACH, RANDOLPH. Sodomitical assaults, gender role, and sexual development in 18th-cen-tury London. Jour. of Homosexuality, XVI (1988), 407-29.
  • TYACK, GEOFFREY CHRISTOPHER. James Pen-nethorne and London street improvements, 1838-55. London Jour., XV (1990), 38-56.
  • WARRINGTON, BERNARD. The bankruptcy of Wil-liam Pickering in 1853: the hazards of publishing and bookselling in the first half of the 19th cen-tury. Publishing Hist., no.27 (1990), 5-25.
  • WARRINGTON, BERNARD. William Pickering, book-seller and book collector. John Rylands Lib. Bull., DOG (1989), 123-38.
  • WILSON, A. Illegitimacy and its implications in mid 18th century London: the evidence of the Foundling Hospital. Cakes and Cockhorse, IV (1989), 103-64.
  • YARDE, D. M. Sarah Trimmer, a young wife and mother. Honeslaw Chronicle, XIII no.1 (1990), 13-17. [ Founded Sunday schools in Brentford, 1786.]
  • ZOUCH, CONNIE. Hayes parish in 1851. Hayes and Harlington Local Hist. Soc. Jour., no.38 (1988), 8-13.
  • Description of local communities 140 years ago: Havering, Hornchurch, Romford, North Ock-enden, Upminster, Cranham, Rainham, Wen-nington, edited from ‘White's Directory’. Heritage Record (1988), 13-23. [Souvenir edn. of the Romford Record.]
  • ACASTER, E. J. T. A London odyssey. Roy. Bank Scotland Rev., no.160 (1988), 36-45. [ Based on T. C. Newman's memoirs of life in a Victorian City bank. Sequel to article in no.155 (1987).]
  • ANTROBUS, EDNA LUCY. William Chard: the life and death of a business. Pt.1. Bygone Kent, XI (1990), 644-50. [ Pawnbrokers in Sydenham in late 19th century.]
  • BAILEY, KEITH. Religion in Victorian Wand-sworth. Wandsworth Historian, no.59 (1990), 14-16.
  • BAILEY, R. H. Victorian army volunteer period-icals. 1, The Earwig (1864-71). 2, The Camp Kettle (1868) and The Handspire (1867). Newspaper and Periodical Hist. Jour., IV no.1 (1987-8), 35-9; VI no.1 (1990), 47-51. [ Wimbledon Camp.]
  • BARTON, RUTH. `An influential set of chaps': the X-Club and Royal Society politics, 1864-85. British Jour. Hist. Science, XXIII (1990), 53-81.
  • BAZZONE, ALAN T. Disturbance at the docks, June 1877. Police Hist. Soc. Jour., V (1990), 42-8. [ West India docks.]
  • BELLEW, SIR GEORGE. Coronation vignettes. 2, The Earl Marshal's office at 14 Belgrave Square. Coat of Arms, n.s., VIII (1990), 254-7.
  • BINFIELD, CLYDE. All Muswell Hill and little Betty Martin: the establishing of a congregational church, 1890-1929. Victorian Values, aspects of a legacy: Hornsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.31 (1990), 2-20.
  • BLANDFORD, REBECCA. A light at the end of the tube . . . the electric underground celebrates its centenary. Lloyd's Log (Oct. 1990), 52–7.
  • BLOOMFIELD, G. T. No parking here to corner: London reshaped by the automobile, 1911-61. Urban Hist. Rev., XVIII (1989), 139-58.
  • BOULLIN, DAVID J. ‘John Forrest, chronometer maker to the Admiralty’: the forgery of Victorian watches. Horol. Jour., CXXXIII (1990), 52-6.
  • BRADLEY, JAMES. The M.C.C., society and empire: a portrait of cricket's ruling body, 1860-1914. Internat. Jour. Sports Hist., VII (1990), 3-22.
  • BRONNER, EDWIN B. Moderates in London Yearly Meeting, 1857-73: precursors of Quaker liberals. Church Hist., LIX (1990), 356-71.
  • BROOKS, CHRIS. Burying Tom Sayers: heroism, class and the Victorian cemetery. Victorian Soc. Annual (1989), 4–20.
  • BROOKS, L. D. Reminiscences of the Tottenham and Forest Gate Junction Railway: introduction and line description. Great Eastern Jour., no.54 (1988), 7-15.
  • BROOKS, LYN D. Stratford drawings. Great Eastern Jour., no.53 (1988), 11-15. [ Several thousand drawings from the Stratford Works Drawing Office are deposited at the Passmore Edwards Museum.]
  • BROWN, BERNARD. `Juliet Bravo'. Police Hist. Soc. Jour., no.3 (1988), 36-43. [ History of J dis-trict, Bethnal Green division, Metropolitan Police.]
  • BRUCE, J. GRAEME. Underground shuttles. Rail-ways South East, I (1987-89), 223-27; 11 (1989), 25-9, 55. [History of branch line shuttle services and their stock.]
  • BURGESS, T. Church Villa School, Harlington. Hayes and Harlington Local Hist. Soc. Jour., no. 42 (1990), 8–11.
  • CAMERON, ANDREA. Andrew Pears and the story of his transparent soap. Honeslaw Chronicle, XIII no.1 (1990), 5-10; no.2 (1990), 9-14. [Pears opened his factory in Isleworth in 1862.]
  • CANT, BILL. Recollections of an Upminster paper boy in the early 1930s. Havering Hist. Rev., no.11 (1990), 7-9.
  • CHERRY, BRIDGET. Civic pride in Hornsey: the building of the Town Hall complex in the 1930s. Between the Wars: Hornsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.30 (1989), 2-14.
  • CHISNALL, C. Mainly the High-Bob. East London Record, no.13 (1990), 9-17. [ Childhood in Poplar in 1920s and 1930s. ‘The High-Bob’ was local nickname for High Street, Poplar.]
  • CREIGHTON, SEAN. Battersea and new unionism. South London Record, no.4 (1989), 31-46.
  • CROOME, DESMOND F. London Transport reports and associated material. Underground News (1989), 369-71,404-5,440-1. [Annotated biblio-graphy, 1933-83.]
  • CURL, JAMES STEVENS. All Saints Margaret Street. Archit. Jour., CXCI no.25 (1990), 36-55.
  • DAVIS, TRACY C. The Savoy chorus. Theatre Notebook, XLIV (1990), 26-38. [ The D'Oyly Carte Chorus in 1880s and 1890s.]
  • DAVY, SIMON. Unknown by name or rank. West-minster Abbey Chorister, II no.3 (1990), 13-17. [ Tomb of the Unknown Warrior.]
  • DE QUIN, DIANA. Jubilee mugs and coronation fruits: schooldays in the thirties. Between the Wars: Hornsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.30 (1989), 32-9.
  • DE CRESPIGNY, STEPHEN CHAMPION, and VIGNE, JAMES RANDOLPH. The directors of the French Hospital, La Providence, 1913-90. Huguenot Soc. London Proc., XXV (1990), 179-83.
  • DEBRUYN, JOHN R. Journal of plague year: Arthur Helps, Stephen Spring-Rice, John Simon and the Health Fund for London, 1853-54. John Rylands Lib. Bull., LXXII (1990), 171-86.
  • DIAMOND, MICHAEL. Politics and the London music hall one hundred years ago. Theatrephile, III (1990), 8-14.
  • DICKINSON, EMMA. Memories of the thirties: 1, Working as a London secretary. 2, Beginning at the B.B.C. Haringey Hist. Bull., no.29 (1988), 5-11.
  • DOWN, DENIS. The Great Western Railway branch line: West Drayton to Uxbridge Vine Street. Uxbridge Record, no.49 (1988), 2-4.
  • ELKAN, JENNY. Knightsbridge could not go to Mahomet . . . Museums Jour., LXXXIX no.9 (1989), 28-31. [ Oriental and Turkish exhibition of lifesize wax work models, 1854.]
  • ELLENBERGER, NANCY W. The transformation of London ‘society’ at the end of Victoria's reign: evidence from the court presentation records. Albion, XXII (1990), 633-53.
  • EVANS, MARGARET. MISS Braddon of Lichfield House. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., X (1989), 582-6.
  • EVANS, MARGARET. The founding of the Hogarth Press in Richmond by Leonard and Virginia Woolf. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., XI (1990), 41-9.
  • FARRELL, JEROME. The German community in 19th-century east London. East London Record, no.13 (1990), 2-8.
  • FAULKNER, PETER. Morris and the Working Men's College. William Morris Soc. Jour., VIII no.3 (1989), 24-8.
  • FROST, K. A. The Barking-Pitsea line: 100 years of a cut-off railway. Railway World, XLIX (1988), 528-6.
  • GREENAWAY, ROBERT. Memories of the `Byron's Head'. Family Tree, V no.3 (1989), 4-5; no.4, 19; no.5, 13. [Extracts from diaries of author's great-aunt, Kate Susannah Hadden (née Porter), b. 1887, brought up at the `Byron's Head', Rail-way St., Bromley.]
  • GROVES, MARY. Charlotte Cowdroy (1864-1932); headmistress of Crouch End High School and College, 1900-1932. Victorian Values, aspects of a legacy: Hornsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no. 31 (1990), 44–50.
  • HALL, STAN. Stock shows at Crystal Palace. Crystal Palace Matters, no.35 (1990), 12-14.
  • HARVEY, CHARLES EDWARD, and PRESS, JONATHAN. The City and international mining, 1870-1914. Business Hist., XXXI (1990), 98-119.
  • HAYWARD, EDWARD. Music Hall in Greenwich and Lewisham, pt.l. Greenwich and Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1990), 258-65.
  • HERNE, JACK. The cricketer Hernes of Middlesex, M.C.C., and England. Hayes and Harlington Local Hist. Soc. Jour., no.41 (1990), 6-10. [1857-1935.]
  • HERIUDGE, KEVIN. The Fry family and the Cherry Island gypsies. Cockney Ancestor, no.47 (1990), 3-8. [ Cherry Island was a part of West Ham.]
  • HETHERINGTON, JILL. `The Muswell Hill outrage': a London suburban crime of the 1880s. Victorian Values, aspects of a legacy: Hornsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.31 (1990), 21-33. [ Armed robbery, Jan. 1889.]
  • HEWLETT, GEOFFREY. Kenton miniature railway. Wembley Hist. Soc. Jour., VI (1988), 134-9. [ Ran through grounds of Kenton Grange in 1930s and 40s.]
  • HEWLETT, GEOFFREY, ed. The Kingsbury I knew: Winifred Upton recalls Kingsbury Green and the Hyde. Wembley Hist. Soc. Jour., VI (1988), 156-64. [ W. Upton b.1903.]
  • HOLMES, SUE. Mr Dodd's- dust yard. Woolwich and District Family Hist. Soc. Jour., no.39 (1990), 8-10.
  • HORDER, MERVYN. The market gardener: a close look at R. D. Blackmore. Exmoor Rev., XXIX (1988), 17-22. [ Author of ‘Lorna Doone’; from c.1858 lived at Gomer House, Teddington.]
  • HOUGHTON, JOY. Harry Yoxal's memories of Richmond as a child. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., XI (1990), 50-5.
  • IRVING, JOHN. Schonberg in the news: the London performances of 1912-1914. Music Rev., XLVIII (1988), 52-70.
  • JENKINS, J. M. The railways of the Royal Gun-powder Factory, Waltham Abbey. Industrial Railway Record, no.117 (1989), 385-415.
  • JERVIS, SIMON. The Department of Furniture and woodwork, Victoria and Albert Museum. Furniture Hist., XXVI (1990), 121-31. [ Its history, 1909-90, and pre-history.]
  • JOHNSON, CHRIS. Buses over Shooters Hill. Aspects of Shooters Hill, no.2 (1989), 31-52.
  • JONES, STAN. Uxbridge between the wars. Uxbridge Record, no.53 (1990), 9-13.
  • JONES, STAN. The Lynch and me, 1921-31. Uxbridge Record, no.54 (1990), 12-15. [ The Lynch was a distinct locality in Uxbridge.]
  • JONES, DAVID. Two Hackney cinemas; The Gaumont Palace, Hammersmith; Two London ABCs. Mercia Bioscope (Spring 1988). [Con-stitutes whole issue. The Hackney cinemas are the Empress and the Pavilion, both in Mare St.; the ABCs are the Savoy, Stoke Newington, and the Regal, Old Kent Rd.]
  • KHWAJA, BARBARA. Female casual and unskilled labour in the 1880s: south London dust women, fur pullers and jam makers. South London Record, no.4 (1989), 22-30.
  • KING, WILFRED J. Early days at Purley water-works. Local Hist. Records [Bourne Soc.], XXVIII (1989), 9-11.
  • LACEY, NORMA. Childhood in Victorian Totten-ham. Victorian Values, aspects of a legacy: Horn-sey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.31 (1990), 41-4.
  • LEGGETT, ANN. Eglinton School. Aspects of Shooters Hill, no.2 (1989), 23-30.
  • LEICESTER, L. J. The Romford garden suburb in Gidea Park. Heritage Record (1988), 3-12. [Souvenir edn. of Romford Record.]
  • LEINSTER-MACKAY, DONALD P. The continuing reli-gious difficulty in late-Victorian and Edwardian England: a case of gratuitous advice from the antipodes. Hist. Educ., XIX (1990), 123-37. [ Party politics of religious education within the London School Board.]
  • LEINSTER-MACKAY, DONALD. ‘The case against Diggleism . . .’: some musings concerning criticisms of quasi-`Thatcherite' policies in the London School Board of the 1890s. Jour. Educ. Admin. Hist., XXII no.2 (1990), 8-15.
  • LITTLE, WALTER F. Edwardian times round Chip-stead valley. Local History Records [Bourne Society], XXVII (1988), 22-7. [ Chipstead lies outside former GLC area, but the article covers the area around it.]
  • LOCKE, PETER. William Morris: Richmond and beyond. Richmond Local Hist. Soc. Jour., XI (1990), 31-8.
  • LUDLOW, BARBARA. Out of Kent and into London: Greenwich and the London County Council, 1889-1965. Greenwich and Lewisham Antiq. Soc. Trans., X (1990), 266-87.
  • LUTCHMANSINGH, LARRY D. Commodity exhibi-tionism at the London Great Exhibition of 1851. Annals of Scholarship, VII (1990), 203-16.
  • MANLEY, BILL. Spectral illusion with real skeleton: the diary of Fred Wilton, 1863. The Terrier, no.19 (1990), 2-5. [ Stage manager of Britannia Theatre, Hoxton.]
  • MARKS, LARA. ‘Dear old Mother Levy's’: the Jewish Maternity Home and the Sick Room Helps Society, 1895-1939. Social Hist. Medicine, III (1990), 61-88.
  • MARTIN, H. L. Living memories: a boy's own Kenley. Local History Records [Bourne Society] , XXVII (1988), 15-18. [ Airfield south of Croydon.]
  • MCCRONE, KATHLEEN. Emancipation or recrea-tion? The development of women's sport at the University of London. Internat. Jour. Sports Hist., VII (1990), 204-29.
  • MCMASTER, R. D. London as a system of signs in ‘Thackeray's 'The Newcomes’. Victorian Rev., XVI (1990), 1-21. [ Published 1853.]
  • METZ, N. A. Little Dorrit London, Babylon revisited: Dickens' urbanisation in Little Dorrit. Victorian Studies, XXXIII (1990), 465-86.
  • MIDDLEMASS, TOM. Royal Arsenal railways. Rail-ways South East, 11 (1990), 111-14.
  • Anus, MARY. The gas workers strike in south London: 1889. South London Record, no.4 (1989), 6-21.
  • MONTAGUE, ERIC NORMAN. James Pain and Sons of Mitcham, manufacturers of fireworks, 1872-1965. Surrey Hist., IV (1990), 35-48.
  • MORRIS, J. N. A disappearing crowd? Collective action in late 19th-century Croydon. Southern Hist., XI (1989), 90-113.
  • NEWHOUSE, VICTORIA. Margot Wittkower: design education and practice, Berlin-London, 1919-39. Jour. of Design Hist., III (1990), 83-101.
  • NEWMAN, TONY. The riddle of Coulsdon's cinema. Local Hist. Records [Bourne Society] , XXVII (1988), 32-4.
  • NEWMAN, RITA. Coulsdon Methodist Church. Local History Records [Bourne Society], XXVII (1988), 39-42.
  • NICHOLS, SARAH. Arthur Lasenby Liberty: a mere adjective? Jour. Decorative and Propaganda Arts (Summer 1989), 76–93.
  • NORD, DEBORAH EPSTEIN. ‘Neither pairs nor odds’: female community in late 19th-century London. Signs, XV (1990), 733-54.
  • OGAN, JON. Martha Tabram, the forgotten Ripper victim. Police Hist. Soc. Jour., V (1990), 79-83.
  • PARKER, SUSAN, and BULLIVANT, ANDREW. FLOM Tower House to Brinklow Crescent. Aspects of Shooters Hill, no.2 (1989), 53-66. [ Tower House, built 1855-60, stood near top of Shooters Hill. Demolished early 1930s.]
  • PEARCE, K. R. An old-fashioned grocer. Uxbridge Record, no.52 (1989), 5-8. [ G. C. Snoad of Vine Street, Uxbridge.]
  • PEMBER, GEOFF. The Great Eastern Railway in east London. British Rail. Jour., Special Great Eastern edn. (1989), 46-69.
  • PHILLIPS, DEBORAH. Race and housing in London's East End: continuity and change. New Community, XIV (1988), 356-69. [ Contrasts late 19th century with 1980s.]
  • PLATT, D. C. M., and ADELMAN, JEREMY. London merchant bankers in the first phase of heavy bor-rowing: the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. Jour. Imperial and Commonwealth Hist., XVIII (1990), 208-27.
  • PORT, M. H. The life of an architectural sinner: Thomas Wayland Fletcher, 1833-1901. London Jour., XV (1990), 57-71.
  • PRICE, ERIC. Music at the Palace. Crystal Palace Matters, no.36 (1990), 25-7.
  • PROUT, DAVID. Willett built: an account of the building activities of William Willett senior (1836-1913) and William Willett junior (1856-1915). Victorian Soc. Annual (1989), 21–46.
  • RAYNER, OLIVE. Don't give up! Perseverence and patience rewarded after nearly 60 years. Essex Family Historian, no.47 (1988), 22-5. [ Author's search for her ancestors, the Hudsons of Bethnal Green.]
  • REYNOLDS, FRED. A Thames disaster. Woolwich and District Family Hist. Soc., no.40 (1990), 11-13. [ Sinking of the ‘Princess Alice’, 1878.]
  • RICHARD, PETER S. The London and Birmingham Railway line: the struggle for its construction. British Rail. Jour., Special London and Birmingham edn. (1989), 3-12. [ Opened 1839.]
  • ROBBINS, MICHAEL. Les Belges a Wimbledon: a curiosity of 1867. Surrey Hist., IV (1990), 114-18. [ Belgian volunteers visited the Wimbledon Common camp.]
  • ROBINS, IAN, and MITCHELL, NICK. Accidents on the London Underground. Underground News (1989), 193-208, 213, 313. [Brief notes on all accidents featured in government accident reports, 1860-1987
  • ROGERS, EDWARD. Mr Speaker's coach. St Giles Cripplegate Parish Mag. (Oct. 1990), 4-7; (Nov. 1990), 5-8. [Coach is kept at Whitbread's brewery and drawn by their horses.]
  • ROSE, GILLIAN. Imagining Poplar in the 1920s: contested concepts of community. Jour. Hist. Geog., XVI (1990), 425-37.
  • ROSE, GILLIAN. Locality, politics and culture: Poplar in the 1920s. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, VI (1988), 151-68.
  • ROYALL, ARTHUR. The development of the Church of England in Tower Hamlets in the 19th and 20th centuries. Family Hist. Mag., VII (1990), 10-12.
  • SARGENT, B. Frederic Eliot Duckham and the Millwall Docks (1868-1909). Newcomen Soc. Trans., LX (1988-9), 49-71.
  • SAWN, JAMES. Priory Park: its purchase and history. Between the Wars: Homsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.30 (1989), 40-6.
  • SCHWITZER, JOAN. Keeping the doctor away: recollections of medical care before the Health Service. Between the Wars: Homsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.30 (1989), 15-31.
  • SCHWITZER, JOAN. Running out of steam. Haringey Hist. Bull., no.29 (1988), 12-16. [ Com-mercial laundries.]
  • SCHWITZER, JOAN. A speculator at work: the tale of a lease. Victorian Values, aspects of a legacy: Homsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.31 (1990), 38-40. [ Lease of 1886 for 46 Langham Rd., West Green, Tottenham.]
  • SCON, PETER G. Harrow station, 1837-1987. British Rail. Jour., Special London and Birmingham edn. (1989), 13–21.
  • SOUTHWICK, LESLIE. The recipients, goldsmiths and costs of the swords presented by the Cor-poration of the City of London. Arms and Armour Soc. Jour., XIII (1990), 173-220. [ Given to British and allied commanders for dis-tinguished service.]
  • SPILLER, MARGARET. The Eltham murder. North West Kent Fam. Hist., V (1990), 203-208. [ Murder of Jane Maria Clousen, April 1871.]
  • SPRINGHALL, JOHN. ‘A life story for the people'?: Edwin J. Brett and the London low life’ penny dreadfuls of the 1860s. Victorian Studies, XXXIII (1990), 223-46.
  • STANWAY, LEN C. The Post Office (London) rail-way. London Postal Hist. Group Notebook, no.91 (1990), 2-15.
  • TICHELAR, MIKE. Labour politics in Croydon before 1914. South London Record, no.3 (1988), 62-5.
  • TOLSON, ANDREW. Social surveillance and subjec-tion: emergence of a ‘subculture’ in the work of Henry Mayhew. Cultural Studies, IV (1990), 113-27.
  • TREVETT, ANNE. Rookfield Garden Estate: a study of the influence of the garden city. Haringey Hist. Bull., no.29 (1988), 17-21. [ Estate is south of Muswell Hill.]
  • VOISEY, F. A collision at Vauxhall, 1912. South Western Circular, VIII (1989), 65-9.
  • WATLING, JOHN. Bishopsgate and Spitalfields. British Rail. Jour., Special Great Eastern edn. (1989), 85-118. [ Great Eastern Railway goods stations.]
  • WATSON, ISOBEL. Account rendered: the diary of William Evans. The Terrier, no.19 (1990), 6-10. [ Late-Victorian clerk living in Homerton.]
  • WEINER, DEBORAH E. B. The architecture of Vic-torian philanthropy: the settlement house as manorial residence. Art Hist., XIII (1990), 213-27. [ Especially Toynbee Hall.]
  • WEST, DENNIS. The Great Eastern Railway horse-drawn van. British Rail. Jour., Special Great Eastern edn. (1989), 38-40.
  • WEST, SHEILA. Eva West, housewife. Victorian Values, aspects of a legacy: Hornsey Hist. Soc. Bull., no.31 (1990), 51-6. [ b. 1891; lived in Crouch End.]
  • WRATTEN, HARRY. Liverpool Street between the wars. Railways South East,11 (1990-1), 156-61.
  • WRIGHT, FRED. F. C.. Mills and the Broad Street Boys Club. East London Record, no.13 (1990), 18-22.
  • WRIGHT, ALAN. The London terminus of the Eastern Counties Railway. British Rail. Jour., Special Great Eastern edn. (1989), 77-84. [ Bishopsgate Station.]
  • YOUNG, KEN. Toppling the colossus: the London County Council and the historians. London Jour., XV (1990), 147-54. [ Review article of Andrew Saint's ‘Politics and the people of London’.]
  • ZOUCH, CONNIE. Hayes and its people 1851-61. West Middx. Family Hist. Soc. Jour., VIII (1990), 20-4.
  • Roman Catholics in London, 1850-65. Cockney Ancestor, III no.1 ( 1990), 10-19. [ Highlights Nicholas Wiseman, first R.C. archbishop of Westminster.]
  • West Norwood cemetery and the Crystal Palace. Crystal Palace Matters, no.36 (1990), 30-3.

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.