Street furniture 00 [ Wooden Pump Websdales Court Bedford
Street, St Michael at Pleas churchyard wall recess (supposedly
marks the site of the Red Well from which Redwell Street took its
name), Common Pump St John Maddermarket Shalders Patent
Fountain Pump c.1836, Gibsons
Pump Westwick Street (a public spring rose near this spot in
the time of Edward I, and in 1576 it was granted to Robert Gibson
on condition that he piped the water to the street and there
erected a pump at his own expense - photographed 1956 in the wall
of Bullards brewery and 1998 facing north towards Anchor
Quay) ]
St John Maddermarket: the Pump
Westwick Street:
Gibsons Pump
Street furniture 01 [ Old Cannon opposite 64 The Close (used as a
corner post - Francis & Blyth Norwich - early 19c.), St
Giles Terrace Bethel Street Gas lamp (most were converted
to electricity 1911-13), Mile Stone opposite Woodlands Park
Dereham Road, Pillar Letter Box Gentlemans Walk (Victorian
- the oldest in Norwich) ]
Street furniture 02 [ Shop signs: Golden Teapot Strangers Hall
museum (a grocers sign once displayed by Robt.Fox and later
John Dodson at his shop at the corner of Magdalen Street and St
Saviours Lane), Golden
Eagle and Pearl shop sign 10 Davey Place (carved by John
Culyer in 1869 a century after the original business was founded
- originally Isaac March silversmith - later Etheridge &
Ellis - then Bonsers tea dealers), Highlander shop sign Millers
the Tobacconists 37 London Street (probably as old as the
business which was founded in 1812) ]
Davey Place: the
Eagle and Pearl
Street furniture 03 [ Parish boundary plates: 1 Earlham Road
(boundary of Heigham St Bartholomew in 1811 - affixed to the
former Grapes Hotel - unique in being the only one outside the
city wall), Coach & Horses Inn 51 Bethel Street (four lead
plates and inscribed stone at boundary of St Giles and St
Peter Mancrofts parishes - dates between 1710 and 1829), 16 Princes Street (three lead
plates at boundary of St Peter Hungates and St George
Tomblands parishes - dates 1777 1828 and 1834) ]
196 such boundary marks were recorded as still existing about the city in the 1930s.
Princes Street: the
Parish Boundary Plates
Street furniture 04 [ Cattle Trough Bell Avenue (now converted to
flower display - inscribed Erected to the Memory of/
Harrington Wyndham Darrell/ Doctor of Medicine/ Thumbs/ Died 9th
January 1920 - Dr Darrell was a great animal lover - the
trough was originally placed next to his house at 12 All Saints
Green), Drinking Fountain at the corner of St George Colegate
churchyard (given to the church in the 19c. by J.C.Barnham -
inscribed Wayfaring Man for thee this Fount was givn/
A Channel to impart the boon of Heavn/ Drink and thank God
and in this water trace/ An earnest of His love, an emblem of His
Grace), Cattle Trough outside entrance to Sewell Park St
Clements Hill (now converted to flower display - inscribed
1917/ This Fountain was placed here by/ Ada Sewell in
memory of her Aunt/ Anna Sewell authoress of Black Beauty and of/
her Sister Edith Sewell/ Two lovers of animals) ]
Street furniture 05 [ Obelisk Drinking Fountain Tombland (erected
1860 by John Henry Gurney to mark the site used by machinery to
raise and store water for the higher parts of the city from c1700
to c1850), Disused Mens
Public Toilet St Crispins Road (built c1919 - believed
to be the oldest one of concrete in the world), Drinking Fountain
at east end of Guildhall (presented in 1859 by Charles P.Melly),
The Hairpin gate (leading to The Close from Horse
Fair St Faiths Lane) ]
Street furniture 06 [ Drinking Fountain Norwich Cemetery Earlham
Road (Presented/ by the/ Chairman/ of the/ Burial Board
Committee/ Alderman/ Ambrose Winter/ 16th August/ 1892),
Millennium Mile Post Agricultural Hall Plain (erected 1998 - one
of many marking the route of the National Cycle Network launched
in 1995 - it shows the distance to the next post) ]
Text and photographs Copyright © G.A.F.Plunkett 2004