Skip to content

Harold Stabler’s Tiles At Bethnal Green

April 15, 2018
by the gentle author

The author of A LONDON INHERITANCE (A private history of a public city) is one of the many luminaries among the alumnii of my blog-writing course and I am delighted to present his most recent post about the tiles at Bethnal Green Tube Station.

A few places are available for my next course HOW TO WRITE A BLOG THAT PEOPLE WILL WANT TO READ on 19th & 20th May. Join me for a weekend in an eighteenth century weaver’s house in Fournier St, enjoy delicious lunches from Leila’s Cafe, eat cakes baked from historic recipes at Townhouse, discover the secrets of Spitalfields Life & learn how to write your own blog!

I have no idea how many times I have walked along the Central Line platforms at Bethnal Green. Yet in all these years, I cannot say that the tiles on the walls have drawn a second glance from me or that I have appreciated the purpose behind their design – until now.

A couple of weeks ago, I spent some time walking up and down the platforms, studying the designs of the illustrated tiles interspersed among the plain ones and photographing them. Subsequently, I have tried to discover the inspirations for these designs which represent London landmarks and heraldic symbols for the counties served by London Transport. Many contain the initial ‘S’ for Harold Stabler who was the designer. Originally, Stabler was asked by Frank Pick, Managing Director of London Underground and first Chief Executive of London Transport, to design a rabbit mascot for the country buses run by London General in 1922.

Born in 1872, Stabler was a skilled designer working in a number of materials including precious metals, and one of his most famous commissions was the Ascot Gold Cup. In 1936, he was appointed by the Royal Society of Arts as the first Designer for Industry, consulting on design for industries and public bodies. He was involved in the creation of Poole Pottery who manufactured the tiles for the Underground. Although his eighteen tile designs were executed in the thirties, Bethnal Green station did not open until 1946 since work on the Central Line extension was delayed by the war.

The first tile represents of London Underground’s headquarters at 55 Broadway and my photograph below shows how accurate the representation is.

The swan been used as a heraldic badge since medieval times and it was adopted by the 2nd Duke of Buckingham and then by the County of Buckinghamshire, also being incorporated in the coat of arms of the Metropolitan Railway. The Dunstable Swan Jewel in the British Museum is an example of this symbol in the form of a brooch, made around 14oo and found on the site of a Dominican Priory in Dunstable in 1965. (photograph ©Trustees of the British Museum)

In this representation of the Palace of Westminster, there are two crowns and a bowler hat representing the Monarch, the Lords and the Commons.

The following tile shows five maidens which represent the County of Berkshire.

Another tile has five birds flying over water, representing the River Thames.

This design is of the Crystal Palace, however this tile does not have the ‘S’ to be found on all the other tiles, so it may not be one of Stabler’s originals.

The number five appears a common theme for the tiles. In this design, there are five birds with two pairs of parallel lines between them. This tile is one of several held by the Victoria & Albert Museum and their record identifies this design as “five martletts – the arms of the City of Westminster.”

This tile illustrates the coat of arms for the County of Middlesex as shown below.

The following design is a bird of prey representing the County of Bedfordshire.

This tile shows a crown above oak leaves with acorns from the coat of arms for the County of Surrey.


This tile has the design of a rearing horse from the coat of arms for the County of Kent.

This winged griffin was the original symbol of London Transport.

This tile above is a representation of the coat of arms of the County of London.

I hope I found all the different designs at Bethnal Green, I spent some time walking up and down, photographing the tiles. There are multiple copies of each of these designs on both platforms.

In 2006, many of the plain tiles along the platform were replaced with replicas. There are still some original panels of tiles and I understand that the decorated tiles are original. Yet the Crystal Palace tile may be a reproduction as it does not include Stabler’s trade mark letter ‘S’ and has different finish to the rest.

Stabler’s decorated tiles were also installed at St. Paul’s, Aldgate East, St. John’s Wood and Swiss Cottage Underground stations. I believe they are still to be seen at Aldgate, but I am not sure of the other stations – something to check when I next visit.

Harold Stabler died in London in 1945 but his designs live on at Bethnal Green.

Photographs copyright © A London Inheritance

HOW TO WRITE A BLOG THAT PEOPLE WILL WANT TO READ  – 19th & 20th MAY

.

Spend a weekend in an eighteenth century weaver’s house in Spitalfields and learn how to write a blog with The Gentle Author.

This course will examine the essential questions which need to be addressed if you wish to write a blog that people will want to read.

“Like those writers in fourteenth century Florence who discovered the sonnet but did not quite know what to do with it, we are presented with the new literary medium of the blog – which has quickly become omnipresent, with many millions writing online. For my own part, I respect this nascent literary form by seeking to explore its own unique qualities and potential.” – The Gentle Author

COURSE STRUCTURE

1. How to find a voice – When you write, who are you writing to and what is your relationship with the reader?
2. How to find a subject – Why is it necessary to write and what do you have to tell?
3. How to find the form – What is the ideal manifestation of your material and how can a good structure give you momentum?
4. The relationship of pictures and words – Which comes first, the pictures or the words? Creating a dynamic relationship between your text and images.
5. How to write a pen portrait – Drawing on The Gentle Author’s experience, different strategies in transforming a conversation into an effective written evocation of a personality.
6. What a blog can do – A consideration of how telling stories on the internet can affect the temporal world.

SALIENT DETAILS

The next course will be held at 5 Fournier St, Spitalfields on 19th & 20th May. Each course runs from 10am-5pm on Saturday and 11am-5pm on Sunday.

Lunch will be catered by Leila’s Cafe of Arnold Circus and tea, coffee & cakes by the Townhouse are included within the course fee of £300.

Accomodation at 5 Fournier St is available upon enquiry to Fiona Atkins fiona@townhousewindow.com

Email spitalfieldslife@gmail.com to book a place on the course.

16 Responses leave one →
  1. April 15, 2018

    I am probably not the only person who wishes for part two of the blogging course. Maybe in September?

  2. Alex Knisely permalink
    April 15, 2018

    Interesting, informative, and impressive — particularly when one thinks of the research that went into finding images that corresponded to the tiles. Thank you.

    Has another cat adopted you yet?

  3. Greg Tingey permalink
    April 15, 2018

    Also at Aldgate East ?

  4. Kim Rennie permalink
    April 15, 2018

    My own research on the Stabler tiles:

    https://www.flickr.com/photos/24772733@N05/albums/72157623188053661/with/4325867516/

  5. Paul Loften permalink
    April 15, 2018

    Perhaps I misunderstood but you said Bethnal Green tube did not open until 1946 but the station must have been there before as the disaster during the Blitz happened during the war when hundreds of people died at the station

  6. Chris H permalink
    April 15, 2018

    A nice selection of tiles – I shall have to take a trip with the camera. I’d already done that at Aldgate East where (as one comment suggests) there are some too. Also to be found at St John’s Wood (or St Johns Wood according to the platform tiles and roundels. For those who prefer not to type “Bethnal Green Station” into google 🙂 the central line extension was started before the war but not opened for passenger use till after it.

  7. Terry Freestone permalink
    April 15, 2018

    Those are not five kings but five maidens’ heads. (They are on the arms of the Borough of Reading.)

    The five martlets in this case belong to Sussex, not Westminster. The City of Westminster has five martlets but they are taken from the arms of Westmimster Abbey which in turn took them from the “arms” of Edward the Confessor (heraldry did not exist at the time of Edward so someone invented his arms much, much later).

    The same set of tiles are also at St John’s Wood and these were listed by English Heritage (now Historic England) a while ago. The description and meaning of the tiles can be found on their website.

  8. Helen Breen permalink
    April 15, 2018

    Greetings from Boston,

    GA, very interesting piece by the student in your blog class – giving life to an everyday environment. I particularly liked the Palace of Westminster tile with “two crowns and a bowler hat representing the Monarch, the Lords and the Commons.” Clever.

    I also had to look up “marlett” defined in heraldry as a “representation of a bird without feet, used as a crest or bearing to indicate a fourth son.” Who knew?

  9. Paul Loften permalink
    April 15, 2018

    Chris H thanks for the google history lesson. I must admit I didnt know that it was not in use as a station until 1946 . I always assumed it was a station that was in use at the time . Having gone to school in Bethnal Green in the 60’s and being a Hackney resident, it was just common knowledge what occured at the station so I never thought to google it . The station’s tiles are very nice but if you mention the history of Bethnal Green Station it is lacking something without mentioning this terrible event and the 173 people that died there.

  10. April 15, 2018

    Good to see these tiles being featured. In an article in Poole Pottery Collector’s Club magazine, Autumn 2014, it was stated that the St Paul’s tiles were destroyed when the station was re-tiled in the 1980’s. It would be more accurate to say that the tiles were made by Carter and Co rather than Poole Pottery as Carter’s were the tile manufacturers. Harold Stabler worked for Carter’s as well as Carter, Stabler and Adams, the firm which later became known as Poole Pottery.

  11. Kim Rennie permalink
    April 15, 2018

    The heraldic symbols represented counties served by London Transport, not London Underground, as the former covered much more of the Home Counties with their Country Buses and Green Line Coaches than does LU today.

  12. Vicky permalink
    April 16, 2018

    I knew I had seen the tiles somewhere and now know it was at Aldgate East. The Victorian Society says the armorial bearings are of the counties served by London Passenger Transport Board with ‘Aldgate East being the station with probably the best, if incomplete, set of Stabler tiles today’.

  13. Kim Rennie permalink
    April 16, 2018

    The complete set are : London Transport bullseye (roundel), London Transport griffin symbol, 55 Broadway; Counties of Kent, Essex, Berkshire, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Middlesex, London, Kent, Surrey, Hertfordshire (Note that there is no representation of Sussex – but the tile with five martlets [birds] could be a misrepresentation of this as the though the Westminster Abbey banner contains five the country crest bears six); Houses of Parliament, River Thames, St Paul’s Cathedral, Thomas Lord, and the Crystal Palace. 18 different variations but no station had a full set. Also, the tiles came in two colour finishes – yellow (as per Bethnal Green) and biscuit beige (as per St. John’s Wood).

  14. Carolyn Badcock permalink
    April 18, 2018

    What a delightful interlude this piece brought! Wonderful work both by the tile designer and the blogger.

  15. Moquette permalink
    June 6, 2018

    Fascinating stuff and as the LU manager responsible for the re-tiling I can tell you that apart from the deliberate retention of four panels (two per platform) every tile in the station including the name friezes (and the faience blocks in the ticket hall and subways) were replaced. This included the field tiles, borders and replicas of the Stabler tiles. This decision was made after serious conservation and aesthetic issues with the partial replacement of 1930s tiles at Turnpike Lane made us work very closely with English Heritage (as it was at the time) to review conservation guidelines for 20th century ceramic tiles. The care and skill to make the new tiles, undertaken by Craven Dunnill Jackfield, was immense as matching the varigated glazes and original firing temperatures, was complex in the extreme; modern materials and techniques are different! For example, the original burnt sienna orange colour was made using, we think, uranium dioxide. Great skill was needed to ‘match up’ old and new, and make sure the setting out of tiling (so as to match tile numbers, widths and grouting) worked across the whole of the elevations. We also had to allow for subtle changes to the dimensions of advertising panels (to allow for metric not imperial poster sizes) and to ensure we got additional timber benches in. From memory, the lovely station thermometer niche on the westbound platform survives, minus a thermometer! For an unListed site it was quite an achievement.

Trackbacks and Pingbacks

  1. Q2 2018 – JennJ – Medium – RE-WORK

Leave a Reply

Note: Comments may be edited. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to this comment feed via RSS