In Celebration Of High St Traders
Yesterday, I walked over to Leadenhall Market in the City of London to buy some sausages and discovered that, after more than six centuries as a meat & poultry market, the last butcher has gone. Thankfully, Peter Sargent the Butcher in Bethnal Green is still in business, so I got on a bus at Liverpool St and returned home with my quest fulfilled.
The experience made realise the value of independent shopkeepers, who are currently struggling under increasing rents, business rates and competition from chains, so today I publish these die-cut Victorian scraps in celebration of traditional High St traders.
Enlarged here to several times their actual size, the detail and characterisation of these figures is revealed splendidly. Printed by rich-hued colour lithography, glossy and embossed, these appealing images celebrate the essential tradesmen and shopkeepers that were once commonplace but now are scarce.
In the course of my interviews, I have spoken with hundreds of shopkeepers and stallholders – and it is apparent that most only make just enough money to live, yet are primarily motivated by the satisfaction they get from their chosen trade and the appreciation of regular customers.
Here in the East End, these are the family businesses and independent traders who have created the identity of the place and carry the life of our streets. Consequently, I delight in these portraits of their predecessors, the tradesmen of the nineteenth century – rendered as giants by these monumental enlargements.
You may also like to take a look at these other sets of the Cries of London
Geoffrey Fletcher’s Pavement Pounders
William Craig Marshall’s Itinerant Traders
H.W.Petherick’s London Characters
John Thomson’s Street Life in London
Aunt Busy Bee’s New London Cries
Marcellus Laroon’s Cries of London
More John Player’s Cries of London
William Nicholson’s London Types
Francis Wheatley’s Cries of London
John Thomas Smith’s Vagabondiana of 1817
John Thomas Smith’s Vagabondiana II
John Thomas Smith’s Vagabondiana III
Thomas Rowlandson’s Lower Orders
It’s such a shame but the overheads for small businesses in and around London are enormous. Most traders work on a relatively small margin and there just isn’t anything left once all bills are paid. I love the trade, it’s hard work but I wouldn’t swap it for anything else. Now then…I’m off to make Sausages!
As an independent bookshop, now in its 39th year, thank you. I do it because I love it .
Excellent.
Thank you.
“……and carry the life of our streets.”
Thank you for this awareness, and the ephemeral paper messengers dressed in their specialized
workday regalia. I tip my hat to the anonymous lithographers who churned out these engaging and enduring images. I so enjoyed revisiting some of the additional links above, under “Cries of London”.
What a place! – What traditions!
Wonderful ancient illustrations!
Love & Peace
ACHIM
Great images, got a lot of them in a book from a flea market. It’s a shame that so many shops are closing down, It’s the same sad story here. Valerie