Shadwell Sailortown: Seamen, Pirates, Slaves and Local Girls

Shadwell Sailortown: Seamen, Pirates, Slaves and Local Girls

By The Naked Anthropologist

From the 17th century Shadwell heaved with ship-suppliers, sailors on leave, pirates, runaway slaves, lascars, opium-eaters and sex workers

Date and time

Location

Shadwell Overground Station

Shadwell London E1 2QD United Kingdom

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Highlights

  • 2 hours, 30 minutes
  • In person

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 1 day before event

About this event

Travel & Outdoor • Travel

Shadwell was an early centre of Docklands, developed to supply both navy and merchant ships. Trades included sail makers, instrument makers, ship chandlers, ship brokers, victuallers, rope makers, glassmakers, sugar refiners, coopers, brewers, distillers and that's not all. It was a multicultural hub where escaping slaves hid out, fed-up sailors started new lives, river pirates spied opportunities and women provided the comforts of home in lodging-houses, taverns and brothels. And of course women were also seamen, pirates, slaves and merchants!

West Londoners came to experience the dangers of the many opium-dens that were standard unwinding for seafarers. Despite the lowlife, merchants based major businesses here to equip British imperial interests and explorations, including privateers sanctioned by the crown to commit piracy on the seas.

Shadwell Basin was the easternmost of three built in the early 19th century, displacing what had been a thriving village. The docks were heavily bombed in WWII, then filled and buildings left to crumble until redevelopment in the 1980s. This is part of the area where midwives from Jennifer Worth's memoir and Call the Midwife television series bicycled to help East-Enders.

On this walk we pass remnants of all these phenomena as well as river stairs, imposing warehouses, green spaces, the Thames Path and numerous appealing pubs.

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The Naked Anthropologist

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£17.50
Sep 27 · 1:00 PM GMT+1