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Wednesday, 22 April 2009

Street Furniture (3) Bollards

Stephen's provided the pics for today's example of early recycling. Old cannon - I don't know whether they were captured from enemies or just decommissioned Royal Navy ones - upended and used to stop carts going up lanes they weren't allowed. Sometimes, as here, in St Alfege's Passage, they've had a cannon ball stuffed into the end, for extra luxury.

Once you start looking for cannon bollards around town, they're everywhere. Especially in The City - the aptly-named Artillery Lane has some splendid examples, if memory serves. Considering it was bombed as much as Greenwich, the City's managed to hold onto a lot of its early street furniture. I guess cannons are hard to blow up.

According to David Ramzan in his latest book, Maritime Greenwich (review coming soon) Deptford, Greenwich and Woolwich had dozens of these cannon-bollards (figures, really) but this one is quite a rare bird round here nowadays.

Interestingly, people seem to have got so used to the way cannon bollards looked that modern bollards are often based on that design.

Here are some others that Stephen found, down between the Lewin Gates and Greenwich's very-sad-looking-just-now pier:


We can't decide whether or not they're actually cannon-based. They have a sort of concrete coating - which would seem an odd thing to do (crunchy on the outside, but you'd break your teeth on the inside) so I'm guessing not - but am prepared to be told otherwise.
Does anyone know of any other genuine cannon bollards in Greenwich?

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5 Comments:

Anonymous Roger said...

Imitation ones are reasonably common - there are also some, similar to the ones at St Alfege Passage, along the pathway from the Almshouses to The Yacht. (They look the part but the giveaway to them being copies comes in the fact that one of them has suffered a bit of breakage)
Real old cannons are rather less common, and the only ones I can bring to mind, being used as bollards, are at a couple of locations around SE18, namely Grand Depot Road, Woolwich, and Garland Road on the far side of Shrewsbury Park.

22 April 2009 10:50  
Anonymous ebspig said...

Did you know that a lot of the City's old street furniture can be seen at Swanage? George Burt 1816-1894 (who was the nephew and business partner of John Mowlem)installed it there when the city got new stuff. Waste not, want not.

22 April 2009 12:02  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

The ones round Gloucester Cathedral are in the shape of needles (Tailor of Gloucester visual pun).

22 April 2009 12:07  
Anonymous Edith said...

I have some pix I took of ones on what was then the Convoy's site at Deptford - not now in Greenwich, but it was then!! I don't know if they are still there since the site came up for redevelopment.

22 April 2009 12:45  
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