EPW005749 ENGLAND (1921). National Projectile Factory, Hackney, 1921
© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.
Manylion
Pennawd | [EPW005749] National Projectile Factory, Hackney, 1921 |
Cyfeirnod | EPW005749 |
Dyddiad | March-1921 |
Dolen | |
Enw lle | HACKNEY |
Plwyf | |
Ardal | |
Gwlad | ENGLAND |
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad | 536591, 185145 |
Hydred / Lledred | -0.029837363127786, 51.548164223831 |
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol | TQ366851 |
Pinnau
This location is now the site of the Kingsmead Estate which has a dreadful, sometimes deserved, reputation for high crime and anti-social activities. |
Keith |
Friday 6th of February 2015 11:42:23 PM |
This is not the existing concrete structure 'Marshgate Bridge' as exists today (from 1935). It is only a narrow affair with the width for a cart! Then at that time the extension of Homerton Road to the east on the other side of the bridge, to what is now known as the Lea Interchange with Ruckholt Road and the M11 link road, wasn't completed until the early 1930s. |
Keith |
Friday 6th of February 2015 11:39:55 PM |
Future site of the Matchbox Factory (Lesney Industries Ld.) - demolished c.2011 |
LadyRed |
Wednesday 26th of June 2013 11:59:02 AM |
Old Lesney Matchbox Factory was along this Road |
divadnosae |
Friday 17th of August 2012 10:16:32 PM |
Er, no it wasn't in this road. If you have a look at the first 'pin' posting by LadyRed earlier than your own, it marks the precise site of the factory by the way, the works was actually in Homerton Road just on the upside approach to Marshgate Bridge. Lee Conservancy Road joins Homerton Road at right angles. There is a date on the bridge structure by the way giving '1935'. |
Keith |
Friday 6th of February 2015 11:18:53 PM |
Now Mabley Green |
divadnosae |
Friday 17th of August 2012 10:15:06 PM |
Homerton Road |
divadnosae |
Friday 17th of August 2012 10:14:46 PM |
Lee Conservancy Road |
divadnosae |
Friday 17th of August 2012 10:14:24 PM |
Cyfraniadau Grŵp
Dangerous Energy has listed Hackney Wick, White Post Lane / Wallis Road, Donald Bagley Phoenix Chemical Works, HM Factory, TQ 371 846, Great War, explosive factory - filling factory. Is this the same place? |
JMB |
Friday 6th of February 2015 11:32:48 PM |
Hi, I'm pleased to say I found some recent references to WW1 munitions' factory sites*, I'll check out the exact ref and advise in due course. Meanwhile, I can say that the one you mention went under the Government Coding of H.M.E.F. (Number) 10. Phoenix Chemical Co, Wallis Road, Hackney. Opened c.1915.That road still exists and you should have been able to draw it up via the Streetmap website. It runs beneath the existing Stratford-Willesden junction Overground Railway Line, and it is also where Hackney Wick Station is positioned. That site is approx 3/4mile SE of this one shown here. The photo here - is referred too in the same documents* as National Projectile Co (Number) 8, Hackney Marshes, built in 1916 by Dick Kerr & Co Ltd, on land then owned by the London County Council. |
Keith |
Friday 6th of February 2015 11:32:48 PM |
There is a brilliant painting by Anna Airy of the inside of the factory, specifically the shell forge on the IWM website here - http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/106 |
jamesweiner |
Monday 20th of August 2012 10:29:21 PM |
That's a great painting! The air photo is really good but doesn't give such a vibrant image of the works as the artist's interior. |
Whittocks |
Monday 20th of August 2012 10:29:21 PM |