About this Event
Using the collections held at London Metropolitan Archives the exhibition provides a window into a Victorian London that has since gone from view. Featuring photographs and records of buildings such as the Oxford Arms in Warwick Lane in 1875, the Pool of London, horse drawn transport, shopping and entertainment, experience a captivating journey through a city that was rapidly evolving.
The nineteenth century saw a huge increase in the population of London from just over two million at the time of the 1841 census to around six million by the end of Queen Victoria's reign in 1901. This inevitably shaped the city with an intense period of building to make way for a new infrastructure that impacted the lives of the people of London. Developments in the twentieth century cleared some of the Victorian buildings as they were beginning to be considered old fashioned. Bomb damage during the Second World War also saw many parts of Victorian London swept away.
Using photographs, maps, panoramas, trade cards, watercolours, and historic documents to explore the theme, this exhibition uncovers London's lost secrets.
Learn more and explore digitised records:
Find out more about London Metropolitan Archives
https://linktr.ee/londonmetarchives
Event Venue
London Metropolitan Archives, 40 Northampton Road, London, United Kingdom
GBP 0.00