Building   

Southwark Fire Station, HQ and Training Centre

Categories: Emergency Services

This location has hosted 4 buildings important to the history of the London Fire Brigade.  We’ll tell the story chronologically.

In 1777 a new St Saviour’s workhouse, by George Gwilt the Elder, was opened at this location, at the end of Pepper Street, shown on this 1792 map. Early in the nineteenth century part of it became a hat factory and the eastern wing (grey brick with white classical pilasters, facing what is now Southwark Bridge Road) was aggrandized and converted into residential. In 1878 this building (the whole site, we believe) was acquired by what was then the Metropolitan Fire Brigade, together with the adjoining site to the south on Southwark Bridge Road. The existing building became the Brigade’s captain’s, Massey Shaw's residence and the Brigade headquarters and training centre. It was possibly at this time that it was given the name Winchester House.

The site was developed to serve its new function: in 1878, the fire station by Alfred Mott was added to the south (red brick, with 3 fire engine entrances and a watch tower); in 1883 a grand Gothic wing by Robert Pearsall, Mott's successor as chief architect, was added to the east, hiding the former workhouse building from the main road; a practice tower was added to the rear c.1880 by Mott; and finally the fire station extension by the Fire Brigade Branch of the London County Council Architects Department, job architect W. E. Brooks (red brick with 4 fire engine entrances plus another entrance) was added in 1911.

This 1889 map show the workhouse being used as 'Chief's residence', etc. and buildings in front of it, labelled 'dwellings' with 3 and a half storeys – the Pearsall Wing which was damaged in the Blitz and demolished in the late 1960s.

While the buildings around the old workhouse courtyard may have housed some fire brigade staff, the courtyard itself was the ‘drill yard’ and it was here that the vast majority of those joining the force 1960s - 90s did their initial training. In 1994 the training centre was completely overhauled and refurbished. Ironically it closed not many years later, mainly due to the expensive damage caused by a fire. The construction of a ‘Fire House’, a replica of a home fitted with gas and electrical appliances for training purposes, was, in 2004, already running late and subject to legal wranglings.

Of the handful of early fire stations designed in the 1870s only Tooley Street, Hampstead and this section of the station at Southwark survive; Southwark is thus of special interest for its rarity. Southwark is the most influential of these surviving stations because, as headquarters, it established a prototype for stations built across London in the 1880s.

2021: Brigade Court is in development - a residential conversion encompassing all the buildings discussed here. 1NewHomes have a useful aerial photo.

Our c.1920s photo comes from Beyond the Flames - a terrific site if you want to know about the fire service, and they have a great page on these buildings, with lots of pictures. This one, reading from right to left, shows: the Fox and Hounds pub (extant); the Gothic Pearsall wing (demolished in the late 1960s); the 1878 Mott fire station with tower; the 1911 Brooks extension. Beyond the Flames closes with "If the LFB had a soul Southwark was it keeper."

Information also came from Listing entry 1 and Listing entry 2.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Southwark Fire Station, HQ and Training Centre

Commemorated ati

Fire Brigade HQ - Southwark

This stone relief was located above the main entrance to the former headquart...

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Southwark Fire Station - extension

This extension was opened by Jocelyn Brandon Esq. Chairman of the Fire Brigad...

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Other Subjects

Auxiliary Firewoman Joan Fanny Mary Bliss Bartlett

Auxiliary Firewoman Joan Fanny Mary Bliss Bartlett

Firewoman with the Auxiliary Fire Service. Killed during an air-raid at Cubitt Town School which was being used as an emergency depot. She was aged 18. Joan Fanny Mary Bliss Bartlett was born on 2...

Person, Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2
2 memorials
PC Nina Mackay

PC Nina Mackay

Born as Nina Alexandra Mackay, c.1972. Working in the Metropolitan Police she went to a flat to arrest a wanted man. He was a paranoid schizophrenic who had previously attacked a PC and expressed h...

Person, Emergency Services, Tragedy

1 memorial
William Henry Fall

William Henry Fall

William Henry Thomas Fall was born on 9 August 1879, his birth being registered in the 3rd quarter of 1879 in the St Saviour registration district, Southwark. He was one of the seven children of Th...

Person, Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2
1 memorial
Colonel Sir Neil Gordon Thorne OBE

Colonel Sir Neil Gordon Thorne OBE

Trustee of The Memorial Gates Trust. In addition to our Picture Source and his Wikipedia page, our research shows that Colonel Sir Neil Gordon Thorne, OBE, TD, DL, was born on 8 August 1932 the so...

Person, Armed Forces, Emergency Services, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Oliver Cromwell Cheater

Oliver Cromwell Cheater

Auxiliary fireman killed in an air raid on Poplar

Person, Emergency Services

War dead non-military, WW2
1 memorial

Previously viewed

Old Town Hall Stratford - 1885 extension

Old Town Hall Stratford - 1885 extension

E15, West Ham Lane

The blue Parson plaque is on the north facade. The 1885 extension plaque is on West Ham Lane, the east side of the building (not in our p...

3 subjects commemorated, 1 creator
Marshalsea Prison

Marshalsea Prison

Originally built to hold prisoners being tried by the Marshalsea Court and the Court of the King's Bench. Its first site, from at least 1329 was on Borough High Street on the block now bordered...

Place, Law

6 memorials
Dame Gracie Fields

Dame Gracie Fields

Entertainer. Born over a chip shop in Rochdale, Lancashire as Grace Stansfield. Worked at Gainsborough Film Studios.  Gracie and her husband Archie moved from Upper Street, N1 in 1929 to The Towers...

Person, Cinema, Humour, Music / songs, Theatre, Italy

4 memorials
Lankester plaque

Lankester plaque

E1, Commercial Road

The plaque is on the wall at pedestrian eye height, immediately below the clock. Numbers 384-392 did not become part of the hospital unt...

2 subjects commemorated
Walter Peerson

Walter Peerson

Lay brother at London Charterhouse. Taken Taken to Newgate Prison, chained and left to starve to death.

Person, Execution, Religion

1 memorial