Tetramesh has a 1906 photo of this building showing that there used to be more to the tower.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Hampstead fire station
Commemorated ati
Clock Tower - Hampstead - new plaque
At British History On-line we read that it closed in 1923, not 1915 as per th...
Clock Tower - Hampstead - old plaque
Clock Tower This well loved Hampstead landmark started its life as the local...
Other Subjects
W. H. Vardill
Co-partner or employee of the South Suburban Gas Company. Served but did not die in WW1.
British and Foreign Sailors' Society
Sailors’ Society is an international Christian charity working in ports across the world. After the Napoleonic Wars ended, the need for ships declined, and many former seafarers became destitute. ...
Stoker 2nd Class Robert Alfred Delamaine
Robert Alfred Delamaine was born in Deptford, London, on 2 January 1916, the sixth of the nine children of John William Delamaine (1879-1951) and Alice Ann Delamaine née Smith (1881-1953). His birt...
E. P. Sanders
Resident of Willesden who volunteered and died in the Anglo Boer War, 1899-1900.
Previously viewed
Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation
From their website: "The Jewish American Society for Historic Preservation is a non-profit, volunteer organization. The purpose of the Society is to identify and recognize sites of American Jewish ...
Queen Elizabeth II
Born 17 Bruton Street, to the Duke and Duchess of York. For information on where she was brought up see Byron Statue. When she was 10 her father became King George VI (on the abdication of his brot...
Carlton Mansions Housing Co-Operative
A long-running squat. News of evictions prompted some interviews with residents. In 2013 Brixton Blog reported: "Many are professional artists; others work in jobs ranging from retail to community ...
London Hop Trade
Hops were introduced to England from the Netherlands. They were grown principally in Kent and brought to London via the River Thames and later by rail to London Bridge. By the mid-nineteenth centur...
William Greenwood
Lay brother at London Charterhouse. Taken to Newgate Prison, chained and left to starve to death.
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