Category: Uncategorized
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25: Kentish Rag Pt2 – Fox’s Quarry and the Loose Valley near Maidstone.

In the previous post I, hopefully, have showed how important Kentish Ragstone is to building London, and, as part of the objective of this blog is to trace London’s building materials to their source, a few months ago I visited a number of abandoned quarries near Maidstone, and I have more visits planned. The…
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23: The John Watson Building Stones Collection at the Sedgwick Museum in Cambridge

I’ve become quite a fan of the Victorians/Edwardians in the course of this project, their fascination with science, building, innovation and categorisation. Less a fan of course of their racism, imperialism, colonialism, sexism, employment practices and their almost utter disinterest in protecting the environment of course! But you can’t have everything! [ NB it is…
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22: Stepney Green Scoria!

One of my absolute favourite London building material is the shiny blue glazed Scoria Brick of Teeside seen above at Stepney Green. Scoria bricks are a by-product of the Teeside iron industry and are not clay based like most other bricks. Iron makers were looking for a use for the waste scum or slag from…
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21: Upper Watergate Street. The oldest street surface in London?

Upper Watergate Street connected, and still connects Deptford, the High Street and St Pauls Church, down the King’s Stairs, with the River Thames, once it’s key highway into London and out to the rest of the world. And I think it has the oldest paving anywhere in London, or at least the most unique! The…
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18: Natures Throne and the Hackney Henge!

Tucked between the two Leas in Hackney, the old river Lea the Saxons and Danes fought over [1], the boundary between Danelaw and Saxon Mercia [2], and the 18thC canalised River Lee Navigation, just south of Lea Bridge in the Middlesex Filter Beds Nature Reserve, stands an unusual granite sculpture called Nature’s Throne, surrounded by…
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15: Beerstone; another chalk you can build with!

Just into Devon, coming from London, on the south coast, is the small seaside town of Beer. Building stone has been quarried below and above ground here since Roman times. And it makes a few appearances in building London. Like Totternhoe [ see previous post ] it’s a chalk, this time a bit younger and…
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13: 16thC bricks at Sutton House, the ‘ Bryck House’, in Hackney, ‘the Arcadia beyond Moorfields’..

The first posts on this blog have been about granite, and granite is indeed the dominant stone along the Thames through in central London. But London more generally is about brick and the wonderful 16thC bricks/brickwork of the Tudor Sutton House in Homerton are some of the oldest in London. Even though the Romans had…
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12: Kit Hill granite! As used to build Battersea Bridge and much more!

Kit Hill is a magnificent granite plug hill in east Cornwall, north of Saltash and close to the Tamar Valley. It’s a ‘Marilyn’ [ see below ] that rises steeply up out of the rolling east Cornish countryside. And like so many of the Cornish granites it too played an important role in building London.…
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11: Penryn -The Granite Port

Of course the Cornish granite destined for London had to be got there somehow. It would be put on tramways, or simply on horse drawn carts but ultimately it need to end up at a railway siding or wharf to be transported to London. I’ve posted about Lamorna before [ https://buildinglondon.blog/2021/08/11/4-lamorna-or-lands-end-granite/ ] a small dock…
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10: Mile End Lock Wall

Some of the oldest walls in London are so called ‘rubble walls’, so not neat ‘dimension stone’ or ‘ashlar’ blocks which fit together so neatly like the Portland Stone that so many buildings in Westminster were built or faced with after the Great Fire of London, nor all the various styles of brick walls. The…
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9: Luxulyan – granite for London Bridge

Luxulyan granite, from the Luxulyan Valley near St Austell also plays a prominent role in building London. Ussher et al. (1909) report that “The granite of St Austell has been used in public buildings in Oxford, London and Rome. London Bridge [the one now at Lake Tavasu, Arizona], the British Museum, and Crystal Palace were…
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8: Kennall Vale

Kennall Vale, just outside Ponsanooth, north of Penryn, has another Carnmenellis granite quarry said to have supplied granite to the Embankment. [1] It’s unclear though as it’s also said the quarry is “early 20th century granite quarry” [2] And the quarry is not on the 1908 map. It’s possible that Kennall Vale supplied granite for…
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7: Bodmin Moor’s Cheesewring quarry

Another quarry famous for it’s supply of granite used for building London is the Cheesewring Quarry on the south-eastern edge of Bodmin Moor, 1.5 kilometres north of the village of Minions. Adrian Spalding noted “The quarry worked the silver-grey granite of Stowe’s Hill, cutting deep into the hillside but stopping short of the famous Cheesewring…
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6: Carnmenellis – Part 2 – The lost London stones!

While exploring the Carnmenellis granite quarries I was told of a lost, overgrown, inaccessible group of stones, that like the Swelltor stones, were bound for London, but never made it, and have stood stacked, gradually getting lost in the Cornish rainforest! This was irresistible and so I made it my object to find them. I…
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5: Carmenellis granite – Part 1 Trolvis

The granites of the South-West come from a number of areas of igneous activity from 100s of millions of years ago that produced large areas of granites called plutons. Humans long ago discovered the use of this granite for building, originally using ‘moorstone’ but increasingly through quarrying. The area with the most mines was the…
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4: Lamorna or Land’s End granite

Lamorna or Lands End granite comes from 3 quarries past Penzance in Cornwall, a few miles before the Lands End and on the ‘Land’s End pluton’ or igneous intrusion that gave rise to granite. It is classified, apparently as a ” … typical Cornubian abundantly megacrystic biotite granite.” [ 1 ] Ruth Siddel states ”…








