Secret Newham: New Book Lifts The Lid On The Eastern Borough

M@
By M@

Last Updated 17 April 2024

Secret Newham: New Book Lifts The Lid On The Eastern Borough
Old sewage pumping station at Abbey Mills
Abbey Mills pumping station. Image: Malcolm Batten

Think you know Newham? A new book finds something fresh on every page.

Where can you see a clock that doubles as a drinking fountain and trebles as a horse trough? Why does Beckton sport a bridge to nowhere? Why has east London got a plaque to Jimi Hendrix? All these questions and 1,000 other details are examined in new book Secret Newham, by Malcolm Batten.

For an entity that didn't exist before 1965, Newham holds a lot of history. Batten's breezy guide captures some of the quirkier corners, from street furniture to abandoned factories to unusual road names, generously illustrated with around 100 photos. Below, we've picked out 10 of our favourite bits of trivia from the book, along with a few of the author's photos.

10 Things you might not know about Newham

Old North Woolwich station
North Woolwich station in March 2022. After years of neglect, it has recently gained a new tenant and been repainted externally. Image: Malcolm Batten

1. Until 1965, East Ham and West Ham had their own fire brigades and ambulance services — part of their powers as County Borough Councils.

2. By the late 19th century West Ham was the eighth largest town in Britain. Its population would peak at 300,860 in the 1921 census but declined thereafter until the present century.

Statue of 1966 World Cup winners
The statue to the World Cup winners at Upton Park, opposite the Boleyn public house, erected in 2003. Former West Ham players Bobby Moore and Trevor Brooking have also been given street names in Newham – Moore Walk and Brooking Road. Image: Malcolm Batten

3. In 2006, Lyle's Golden Syrup tin was awarded a Guinness World Record as being the world's oldest branding. (As of 2024 it's been rebranded.)

4. The disused remains of Beckton Gas Works were used to represent bombed-out Vietnam in certain scenes of the 1987 film Full Metal Jacket directed and produced by Stanley Kubrick.

A set of gates into Beckton Gas Works
At the end of Winsor Terrace; these gates once led to the Beckton Gas Works. Image: Malcolm Batten

5. In 1891 the Stratford Railway Works of the Great Eastern Railway fully erected a locomotive in 9 hours, 47 minutes – a world record never beaten.

6. On 6 August 1939 the Cunard-White Star liner SS Mauritania entered King George V Dock after its maiden Atlantic crossing. At 772 feet long and 89 feet 6 inches wide, it only just fitted into the entrance lock, which is 800 feet long and 100 feet wide. Over 100,000 people came to watch its entrance — the largest ship to ever enter the Royal Docks.

A concrete bridge that goes nowhere
A bridge at Beckton that abruptly ends. It was to join up with a Thames Gateway Bridge that was never built. Image: Malcolm Batten

7. A public house on the south side of Stratford Broadway used to be named The King of Prussia, commemorating Frederick the Great (1740–86). However, in 1914 with the outbreak of the First World War it was patriotically renamed King Edward VII, a name it still carries.

8. During the Covid-19 pandemic crisis of 2020, a large tented temporary mortuary was set up on Wanstead Flats. This was removed later in the year as the situation eased and the ground was re-seeded with grass.

A row of rural cottages on Romford Road
Along the south side of Romford Road in Forest Gate are a group of three pairs of small cottages, which seem older and out of keeping with the Victorian and Edwardian surroundings. These were built as farm cottages in 1840 and give a glimpse of the area's rural past. Image: Malcolm Batten

9 At the 1936 Olympic Games, five members of the British water polo team came from Plaistow Swimming Club.

10. On 8–9 October 1988 the French musician Jean-Michel Jarre held a concert with fireworks and light show (Destination Docklands) in the former Royal Victoria Dock, attended by some 200,000 people. The light show used second world war searchlights and lasers, lighting up the area like the incendiary bombs of wartime, and the electronic music could be heard from as far away as Manor Park.

Old Trebor sweets factory
Externally, the former Trebor Sweets factory in Forest Gate still looks much as it did in its commercial days. Image: Malcolm Batten

Secret Newham by Malcolm Batten is out now from Amberley Books.

Note: As well as the publisher link, we've also included an affiliate link to Bookshop.org, which will source your copy from an independent bookshop (and throw us a few pennies of commission).

Secret Newham book