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(1923)
The Sad Case of South London
The section which follows is based on N. Smith, 'A brief account of the origins of the South London Art Gallery
Peripheral Vision: Alternative Aspects and Rural Presences in Mid-Eighteenth-Century London
(1947)
South London
A. Paterson, E. Talbot
Across the Bridges: Or, Life by the South London River-Side
A Summar)' of the History of the South London Art Gallery
(1906)
The Diocese of Southwark, being a Short Account of the History, Character and Needs of South London and other Parts of the Diocese
while the urban hundreds and parishes below the Thames, including Deptford, Blackheath and Greenwich, total 471,224. The 1901 Census of England & Wales Summary Tables yield a total of 4
Joint Hon. Sec. South London Committee on Museums
H. Dyos (1953)
Workmen's Fares in South London, 1860–1914The Journal of Transport History, fs-1
Living in South London: Perspectives on Battersea 1881-1981 (1982), for Battersea's radical opposition to the Boer War
(2000)
Modern London
The Life of GeorgeM
Reproduced by pernlission of the South London Gallery
The Lady Margaret Mission in Walworth
The Surrey Side
See, for example, the anonymous review
Clare College Mission in Rotherhithe
The Fur-Pullers of South London
Susan Schulten (2002)
:Geography Militant: Cultures of Exploration and EmpireIsis
The Suburbans (1908)
Cited in B. Kosmin 'Political Identity in Battersea
Government and the Metropolitan Image: Ministers, Parliament and the Concept ofa Capital City 1840-1915', in Arnold, Metropolis and its Image
Cited in Waterfield, Art for the People
(1952)
The Suburban Development of Greater London South of the Thames
Art for The People: Culture in the Slums of Late Victorian
The Great Metropolis, or Views & HistmJ of London in the J.Vineteenth Century, being a Grand National Exhibition of the British Capital
The Metropolitan Weekly & Provincial Press
Dickens's Dictionary of London
C. Masterman
From the abyss : of its inhabitants by one of them
G. Sala (2008)
Twice Round the Clock; Or, the Hours of the Day and Night in London
(1982)
The Speculative Builder-Developers of Victorian London
Carol Aronovici (1914)
Suburban DevelopmentThe ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 51
D. Arnold (2000)
Re-Presenting the Metropolis: Architecture, Urban Experience and Social Life in London 1800-1840
Ysanne Holt (2000)
London TypesThe London Journal, 25
The Lady Margaret Mission
C. Booth
Labour and life of the people
W. Ashworth, F. Thompson (1982)
The Rise of Suburbia
AbstractThe rapid expansion of areas south of the Thames over the course of the Victorian period was paralleled by the construction of new urban identities for 'South London'. Drawing primarily upon newspaper and other written sources, this article explores emerging representations of Victorian south London. It focuses on two key periods: from the mid-1850s to the mid-1860s, when it is possible to trace the birth of a local consciousness of 'South London' as a distinct entity, with its own significant shared challenges and interests over and against the rest of the city; and the 1890s, when south London was 'discovered' and constituted as a particular problem by social investigators and external agencies eager to differentiate it from competing arenas of intervention in the metropolis. The article suggests that a 'South London consciousness' failed to emerge as a sufficiently cohesive force to reshape urban development in the 1850s and 1860s and to wrestle resources from the remainder of London. It is argued that the consequences of this were central to representations of south London in the 1890s and that they continued to haunt depictions of London 'across the bridges' well into the twentieth century.
The London Journal: A Review of Metropolitan Society Past and Present – Taylor & Francis
Published: May 1, 2004
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