Latitude: 51.5205 / 51°31'13"N
Longitude: -0.0667 / 0°4'0"W
OS Eastings: 534227
OS Northings: 181942
OS Grid: TQ342819
Mapcode National: GBR Y9.44
Mapcode Global: VHGR0.S1LR
Plus Code: 9C3XGWCM+58
Entry Name: 131-145 Victoria Cottages
Listing Date: 3 December 2002
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1096023
English Heritage Legacy ID: 489913
Also known as: 131-145 Woodseer Street E1 5HG
ID on this website: 101096023
Location: Spitalfields, Tower Hamlets, London, E1
County: London
District: Tower Hamlets
Electoral Ward/Division: Spitalfields & Banglatown
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Built-Up Area: Tower Hamlets
Traditional County: Middlesex
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Greater London
Church of England Parish: Christ Church Spitalfields
Church of England Diocese: London
Tagged with: Cottage
788/0/10162
03-DEC-02
WOODSEER STREET
131-145 Victoria Cottages
GV
II
Victoria Cottages, 131-145 Woodseer St.Development of artisans' dwellings. 1864 for the Metropolitan Association for Improving the Dwellings of the Industrious Classes. Probably designed by Henry Roberts (1803-1876). Development of fourteen terrace houses, each sub-divided into two units.
PLAN: rectangular plots with wings to rear, one dwelling per floor, originally comprising three rooms with sanitary facilities.
EXTERIORS: Stock brick, red brick door and window surrounds, slate roofs. In general, the two-storey houses comprise two-window fronts with shallow brick arches over the double doors; red brick arches over the ground floor windows. 6/6-pane sashes. 131-145 Woodseer St consists of a terrace of four double dwellings. 7-20 Victoria Cottages consists of an L-shaped row of double dwellings, reached from the pavement that runs between the two rows. 14-22 Deal Street consists of a row of three double dwellings, contiguous with the west flank of Victoria Cottages.
INTERIORS: not inspected, believed to be considerably altered.
HISTORY: the Metropolitan Association purchased the site of Victoria and Albert Cottages [q.v.] in 1850; the latter were built in 1857-58, and were followed by Victoria Cottages in 1864, on the site of what had formerly been called Pleasant Row. These small cottages, of a kind more commonly found in the north of England, were intended for artisan families unable to afford the higher rents of the larger family units in those dwellings that were beginning to be built by philanthropic housing bodies at this time. Their low-rise low density was criticised by their architect, no less, at the time of construction but they now afford a rare insight into the sort of cottage accommodation once common, but now scarce, in the East End. The western end of the southern row suffered from bomb damage and is excluded from the listing. The houses underwent major refurbishment in the late 1970s by the Newlon Housing Trust.
SOURCES: J.M. Tarn, 'Five per Cent Philanthropy' (Cambridge 1973), 26-27; James Stevens Curl, 'The Life and Work of Henry Roberts' (Chichester 1983), 114-115, 197-98.
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