Hi All, Can anyone tell me what Rowton House, 55 Fieldgate, Whitechapel, London was. Maybe a prison?. I think my Thomas b 1877 was there as he was not with his family on the 1911 census, his wife was down as wife not widow. Thank you, Ann.
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Have you tried googling for info?
Always the place to start.............
If it had been a prison, he would not be described as a 'resident'
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Always try google for this sort of thing..............
Jump to: navigation, search The Rowton House in Highgate, Birmingham. Now a hotel
Rowton Houses were a chain of hostels built in London, England by the Victorian philanthropist Lord Rowton to provide decent accommodation for working men in place of the squalid lodging houses of the time.
George Orwell, in Down & Out In Paris and London, wrote about lodging houses: "The best are the Rowton Houses, where the charge is a shilling, for which you get a cubicle to yourself, and the use of excellent bathrooms. You can also pay half a crown for a special, which is practically hotel accommodation. The Rowton Houses are splendid buildings, and the only objection to them is the strict discipline, with rules against cooking, card playing, etc."[1]
The Rowton Houses throughout London were:
Vauxhall, 1892 Kings Cross, 1894 (the serial killer John Christie stayed here for four nights shortly before his arrest) Parkview House in Newington Butts, 1897. Demolished in 2007. Hammersmith, 1897, later demolished Tower House in Whitechapel, 1902. The building has since been developed into luxury housing. Joseph Stalin stayed there for a fortnight in 1907.[2] Arlington House in Camden Town, 1905.[3] The last and largest of the Houses, and the only one to remain in use as a hostel (as of 2011).
The architect for the bulk of the houses was Harry Bell Measures FRIBA, who also designed the tube stations for the Central London Railway in 1900 and was well known as the designer of many army barracks.
There was also a Rowton House in Highgate, Birmingham, that opened on 29 June 1903. It was built by the Birmingham Rowton Houses Ltd, from the designs and under the supervision of Measures. This building later became a hotel, the Paragon[4] and [1]
Dea x
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Hi, Thank you for the advise. I always google other thing but somehow never thought of using it for researching ancestry. Silly me. Regards, Ann. :-D
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Thomas Woolcott England and Wales Census, 1911 birth Stepney, Middlesex census 1911 Whitechapel, Whitechapel E, London, England nameThomas Woolcott eventCensus event date1911 genderMale age34 birthplaceStepney, Middlesex record typeInstitutionregistration districtWhitechapelsub-districtWhitechapelparishWhitechapelcountyLondon
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Hi AnnCardiff, That sounds like him. Thank you Ann
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1911 England Census about Thomas Woolcott Name: Thomas Woolcott Age in 1911: 34 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1877 Relation to Head: Resident Gender: Male Birth Place: Stepney, Middlesex, England Civil parish: St Botolph without Aldgate, Mile End New Town and Whitechapel County/Island: London Country: England Street Address: Rowton House, 55 Fieldgate Street, Whitechapel E Marital Status: Single Occupation: DOCK LABOURER Registration district: Whitechapel Registration District Number: 18 Sub-registration district: Whitechapel ED, institution, or vessel: 21-30 Piece: 1497
I think its a military barracks
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