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Dennis Anthony’s Petticoat Lane

April 6, 2025
by the gentle author

 

Click here to book for The Gentle Author’s Tour of Petticoat Lane

The next tour of Spitalfields is Saturday 12th April

The next tour of the City of London is Sunday 18th May

 

If you are looking to spruce up your linen cupboard with some fresh bolster cases or if it is time to replace those tired tea towels and soiled doilies, then these two lovely gentlemen are here to help. They have some super feather eiderdowns and quality blanket sets to keep you snug and cosy on frosty nights, and it is all going for a song.

One Summer Sunday in the nineteen fifties, Dennis Anthony took his camera down Petticoat Lane to capture the heroes of the epic drama of market life – all wearing their Sunday best, properly turned out, and even a little swanky. There is plenty of flash tailoring and some gorgeous florals to be admired in his elegant photographs, composed with dramatic play of light and shade, in compositions which appear simultaneously spontaneous and immaculately composed. Each of these pictures captures a dramatic moment – selling or buying or deliberating – yet they also reward second and third glances to scrutinise the bystanders and all the wonderful detail of knick-knacks gone long ago.

When the West End shops shut on Sundays, Petticoat Lane was the only place to go shopping and hordes of Londoners headed East, pouring through Middlesex St and the surrounding streets that comprised its seven “tributaries,” hungry for bargains and mad for novelty. How do I know this? Because it was the highlight of my parents’ honeymoon, when they visited around the same time as Dennis Henry, and I grew up hearing tales of the mythic Petticoat Lane market.

I wish I could buy a pair of those hob-nailed boots and that beret hung up beside the two sisters in shorts, looking askance. But more even than these, I want the shirt with images of records and Lonnie Donegan and his skiffle group, hung up on Jack’s stall in the final photograph. Satisfied with my purchases, I should go round to Necchi’s Cafe on the corner of Exchange Buildings and join those distinguished gentlemen for refreshment. Maybe, if I sat there long enough, I might even glimpse my young parents come past, newly wed and excited to be in London for the first time?

I am grateful to the enigmatic Dennis Anthony for taking me to Petticoat Lane in its heyday. I should like to congratulate him on his superlative photography, only I do not know who he is. Stefan Dickers, the archivist at the Bishopsgate Institute, bought the prints you see here on ebay and although they are labelled Dennis Anthony upon the reverse, we can find nothing more about the mysterious photographer. So if anyone can help us with information or if anyone knows where there are further pictures by Dennis Anthony – Stefan & I would be delighted to learn more.

You might also like to see

Postcards from Petticoat Lane

Laurie Allen of Petticoat Lane

4 Responses leave one →
  1. Andy permalink
    April 6, 2025

    They paint the vibrancy of the East End and some of the characters I grew up with .

  2. April 6, 2025

    An exciting report, with rare photos. I’m going to visit one of the larger flea markets today to experience a similar atmosphere on this Sunday.

    Love & Peace
    ACHIM

  3. April 9, 2025

    What a beautifully nostalgic piece—thank you for sharing this! It really paints such a vivid picture of a time and place that feels both distant and charmingly familiar. I could almost hear the banter of the traders and the rustle of fabric from the stalls. Petticoat Lane must have been a treasure trove of character and charm. And Dennis Anthony’s photos sound like absolute gems—I’d love to see them sometime. It’s amazing how much history and heart can be found in something as simple as a market day.

  4. Ian Silverton permalink
    April 11, 2025

    Second picture down from Top is a picture of Charles Kray snr, father of Reg and Ronnie Kray. He was a jewellery dealer back then. Guy nearest camera. Be Well GA.

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