Make Do And Mend
Top of the list of jobs to do is to build housing for all the people displaced by the Blitz. Thing is, the stuff you have in your warehouses isn't always quite right for the job...
For example - you're really short on railings to go round these new homes for heroes. All you've got in the stores are thousands of old stretchers hurriedly fashioned from tubular metal and wire mesh as standard issue for ARP wardens. They'd always been bloody uncomfortable if you had the misfortune to have to lie on one, but they did the job - and it seems a shame to throw them away. Waste not, want not...
I first read about Wartime Stretcher Railings in Peter Ashley's fascinating More London Peculiars (English Heritage, 2007) but he was only talking about them as being around one block of flats - just outside Oval cricket ground. I actually made a pilgrimage to see them - and they are fab.
You honestly wouldn't know they weren't actually built as railings if it weren't for the four little kinks - one in each corner - bent into the supporter bars to keep the stretcher off the ambulance floor, and the weld-marks every six feet or so where the handles have been bonded together.
Thing is - the picture above isn't from the Oval.
I actually took this picture in Watergate Street in Deptford. I hadn't noticed the railings - I was too busy looking at the ancient piece of wood embedded in the giant dock wall opposite and they had to be pointed out to me - but there's no doubt about it - these are wartime stretcher railings.
Which begs the question - how many more are there? I was under the impression that the ones at Oval were unique - it would seem not. South and East London copped most of the bombs - so presumably they also had most stretchers. I'm beginning to think there must be more of these recycled pieces of Home Guardery - anyone know any?
Next time you happen to be walking down Watergate Street (if nothing else, to see the watergate itself, slid in between that poor old Borthwick warehouse that only has its facade left and doesn't appear to have been touched for years, and the giant dock wall, down a nasty scaffolding passage) take a moment to look at those railings and allow yourself to be transported to the Blitz.
To the rubble and smoke, fires and blood - and the poor sods who were carried to hospital on a set of garden railings...
Labels: deptford, Not-Quite-Greenwich, Wartime stretcher railings, Weird Greenwich


16 Comments:
If you're down there don't miss the opportunity to visit the Dog and Bell, one of the best value pubs in the area, for a pint and some genuinely home-cooked-to-order food. Not like a "Deptford pub" at all.....
Indeed - it's a cough and a spit from the railings. They have good music there too.
Amazing bit of local history, Thanks Phant'.. and these stretchers can be clearly seen on google street view.... As can the wonderful Dog and Bell....If you look closely at the sign outside the pub, you can almost see what guest beers were being served when the photo was taken. And Rod they were...?
Sharp's Doom Bar, Meantime London Pale Ale and Dark Star's Hophead.
What a cracking piece of local history, Phantom. I was so taken by the story that I popped down there today to take a look myself. Kind of thing to keep a close eye on. There's so much history on that bit of the river and yet in recent times so much of it has been 'disappeared'. For example, here's a factoid from Wikipedia ... "From 1871 until World War I The shipyard site was the City of London Corporation's Foreign Cattle Market. In 1912 The Times reported that over 4 million head of live cattle, and sheep, had been landed." No trace of that today. We will seriously rue the time when countless luxury flat developments have robbed us of our history.
Mmm, Dark Star.... how do you rate Meantime Union, Rod?
There are all around the council estate in Dog Kennel Hill and I have come across a few other places in the same area.
I also have the same London Peculiars book so I was surprised of them popping up in more places when you know how they look like.
There are more in Deptford, outside Carrington House on Brookmill Road.
Idris, if you use the zoom on the Street View you can actually read the guest signs on the wall: St Benoit, Trappistes Rochefort, London Pride, Greene King IPA, Fuller's ESB...
"Mmm, Dark Star.... how do you rate Meantime Union, Rod?" Well, I brew it so modesty forbids.......
"Idris, if you use the zoom on the Street View you can actually read the guest signs on the wall: St Benoit, Trappistes Rochefort, London Pride, Greene King IPA, Fuller's ESB..."
Actually, Jack, these are fixed signs advertising beers that the Dog and Bell tends to have on most, or all, of the time. In addition they will have three cask ales which change regularly, and it is these which will be written up on the chalkboard.
The three I named are just three of my favourites - the range they put on over time is extensive.
A friend says he's read the same book and seen the railings all over south london, dulwich, etc, and even in islington.
Which makes us doubt the validity of the claim - exactly how many stretchers were there? It seems like n urban myth, tbh.
No, not an urban myth. Why would anyone go to the trouble of putting the kinks in - not to mention wasting the precious resources - instead of using what was to hand and no longer needed. Stretchers were used in shelters, ambulance trains and all sorts of other places. South London has got the most examples of their secondary use because Sarf Lunnon had the most rebuilding to do. If they aren't already, the best examples should be listed - anyone know if they are?
I think the element of doubt is introduced by the use of the word 'stretcher'. These were more emergency casualty beds, not rescue stretchers being rushed in and out of burning buildings and bombcraters.
See the pics and posts on this Flickr site for more info...
http://www.flickr.com/groups/londonatwar/discuss/72157601085399563/
Wolfe, you have cleared things up splendidly. I was thrown by the description of them as stretchers, as they are clearly unsuitable for use in the field, being far too heavy and unwieldy. It would take two people to carry even an empty one, and they would be far harder to srote when not in use than the conventional wood and canvas stretchers of the time.
I'd offer to buy you a pint in the Dog and Bell, but they don't sell Strongbow.........
You See? YOU SEE? Once again cruelly discriminated against by the cloudy ale mob...
Well, I'm sorry, but they don't sell Strongbow and there it is. However the ales at the Dog are never cloudy, they are well kept and fall nice and bright. Are you sure you wouldn't like to try a pint of Old Pigbiter...?
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