Columbia Road Market
Once a genteel country
hamlet, by the 19th century Bethnal Green had grown to become one of London’s very poorest areas – a report of 1868 stated that:
“A large part of the population, at the
best of times, is on the verge of pauperism”. In 1861, the social commentator and manager of
the Gaiety Theatre, John Hollingshead, described Columbia Road’s denizens as “mainly poor dock labourers… poor
silk-weavers… the lowest kind of thieves… the women mainly hawkers,
seamstresses, the coarsest of prostitutes and aged stall-keepers.”
In 1869, Lady Burdett-Coutts,
famous heiress and benefactor of the Victorian era, turned her attention to
Bethnal Green. With encouragement from her friend Charles Dickens, she constructed a huge,
purpose-built covered market in High Gothic style, a project in which she was to
invest £200,000. She was
concerned that the tolls collected at other London markets were pushing up the
price of food and poorer people were therefore being cheated. The aim of her
project was to bring cheap food to the people without the
intervention of ‘middle men’, as she described it: “to supply the surrounding poor with wholesome food at a fair rate; to
bring the producer and consumer into closer communication with each other; and
to promote habits of industry and thrift among the humblest class of traders.”


In 1886, the market closed for good, with street traders moving on to their preferred traditional sites in Petticoat Lane and Roman Road. The building came into its own briefly during the Blitz, when its spacious cellars served well as an air raid shelter. After the war it was used for storage but was then demolished in 1960, to be replaced by Ravenscourt Park and a tower block named (aptly) Old Market Square.
All that remains of Columbia Road market today is a section of railing and
a pair of gateposts which stand outside the local nursery school. The once grand edifice, the ‘grand projet’ of rich benefactors
who thought they knew what was best for the ‘little people’ has gone down in
history - to quote the architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner - as “one of
the great follies of the Victorian age”.
Public Good by private Means: how philanthropy
shapes Britain by Rhodri
Davies (2016)
My East End by Anita Dobbs (1987)
The East End of London by Millicent Rose (1951)
Columbia Market, Bethnal Green (Illustrated
London News 1st May 1869)
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