Photographs of a disappearing city
The first twenty four of the following photographs were taken in August and September 1961 by an anonymous photographer. They are probably from a 24 shot, 120 roll film. They were found, carefully captioned, in an album that originally turned up at a postcard fair in Bristol. This is the first time they have been published with their original captions, along with additional notes beneath the image if required. The album had the following written in the front:
Sep 1962
Bits of the 'Older Exeter'. Some of the photographs show 'derelict houses' waiting to be demolished. Other photographs are of slum property still occupied.
I have also added some additional photographs from circa 1965, of other buildings in the Exe Island and Shilhay area, taken by Alan H Mazonowicz. Together they show the housing of many Exonians from Victorian times until the slum clearances and rebuilding of the 1960's.
Please note that all these photographs are © 2007 Exeter Memories.
|
|
Rackclose Place
Derelict, Sep 1962
See Rack Street & Rack Close Lane
|
Rackclose Place
Derelict, Sep 1962
|
|
Needles Terrace
(rear of Rackclose Place)
Derelict, Sep 1962
This was mis-named Needles Terrace in the album and was Beedles Terrace.
|
Needles Terrace
(rear of Rackclose Place)
Derelict, Sep 1962
.
|
Old Houses Commercial Road
Sep 1962
These houses were the first houses on the left as you entered Commercial Road from its junction with Edmund Street. See Commercial Road
|
Rear of above houses/the leat
Sep 1962
Refers to the photograph on the left. The photograph was taken from Horsepool Bridge, almost opposite St Edmunds Church.
|
|
Old property Commercial Road
Showing Victoria Cottages (1869) and old shop
Derelict Sep 1962
These properties were on the same side of the road and close to the warehouse clubs in Commercial Road. The opening by the wall in the distance is shown in the next photo, and the building in sunlight is Bodley Bros. & Co Ltd, brass and iron founders.
|
Old property Commercial Road
Derelict Sep 1962
This is the side entrance to the old ironworks of Bodley Brothers - Victoria Cottages are to the left.
|
|
Tabernacle Place (from inside)
Sep 1962
Tabernacle Place was a courtyard at the bottom of Coombe Street, close to its junction with West Street. Chris Byles informs me that there was a small chapel in the place, which will account for its name.
|
Tabernacle Place/from Coombe Street
Sep 1962
|
|
Old property/corner Coombe Street
Sep 1962
Coombe Street is on the left and Quay Hill on the right. Tabernacle Court was about 30 yards up Coombe Street, on the right. I have been informed that the corner building was a second hand business up until 1953, when the Council moved the family because the building had become unsafe. It was also infested with rats from the leat and tannery below. The house was lit with oil and gas lights as it had no electricity, it only had cold running water and an outside toilet. The building remained empty and wasn't demolished until after 1962. Information courtesy of Chris Byles.
|
Looking into Mermaid Yard
Sep 1962
Cotton Building is the block on the right. Cotton building had wash houses for the residents and toilets situated at each end of the balconies. Both Cotton and Folletts Building had 4 floors, 3 of which had balconies and a flat roof which where used for washing lines. Follett's had interior plumbing and toilets for the flats and two rubbish chutes in each passage way; workmen had to shovel them out regularly. Follett's Building overlooked Coombe Street out of the photo, on the left. Information courtesy of Robert Stewart.
|
|
Old property (bottom of Paris Street)
Aug 1962
See Paris Street
|
Derelict house/bottom of Paris Street
Aug 1962
|
|
Houses in Russell Street, Newtown
Aug 1962
|
Old shops Belgrave Road
Aug 1962
|
|
Parr Street, Newtown
Aug 1962
See Newtown
|
Old property Russell Street
Aug 1962
|
|
Very old property Tudor Street
Aug 1962
Some of the only buildings photographed that still exist - the centre building is the well known Tudor House and Eagle House, part of the Eagle Foundry the near building.
|
Frog Street/site of Tudor House
Aug 1962
Taken from Edmund Street, looking towards Exe Island. The caption is wrong - the small, empty space on the left was the site of the Merchants House, moved in 1961, and now known as The House that Moved. See Frog Street
|
|
Kerrians Place, North Street
Aug 1962
See North Street
|
Chapel Court/rear entrance into North Street
Aug 1962
|
|
No caption
Aug 1962
It is assumed that this is off Magdalen Street as it was paired with the photo on the right.
|
Inside Faulkner's Place, Magdalen Street
Aug 1962
|
|
43 and 44 Alphington Street
1965
|
Browns Court, off Cowick Street
1965
These dwellings were behind Boots the Chemist on Cowick Street, in an area now occupied by Boots and Next.
|
|
Tudor Street and the Tudor House
1965
|
Leat Terrace, Cricklepit
1965
A story once circulated in Commercial Road, that told of a builder who, during World War Two, was engaged to construct new toilets at the back of Leat Terrace. Holes were cut without any shoring - when they returned after lunch, the whole building was leaning dangerously. The original toilets emptied straight into the leat.
|