At 37 Spital Square
Drawing of 37 Spital Sq by Joanna Moore
What could be a better showcase for the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings than the fine eighteenth century house they restored in Spital Sq which serves as their headquarters? This magnificent tottering pile is the last surviving Georgian mansion of the entire square once lined with such dwellings, which traced the outline of the former Priory of St Mary Spital that was established in 1187. Indeed, pieces of Medieval stonework from the old Priory buildings are still visible, tucked into the foundations of 37 Spital Sq.
Originally constructed in the seventeen-forties as the home of Peter Ogier, a wealthy Huguenot silk merchant, the house has been through many incarnations both as dwelling and workplace until the Society took it on in a rundown state in 1981 and brought it back to life. As a Society that counted William Morris, John Ruskin, Thomas Hardy, Beatrix Potter, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and John Betjeman among its members, the SPAB is irresistible to any writer with a passion for old buildings, and 37 Spital Sq certainly does not disappoint.
Neither museum or showhouse, the building has preserved its shabby charm as a working environment where people sit absorbed at their desks in elegantly proportioned rooms, surrounded by all the clutter of their activities and a few well-chosen paintings and pieces of old furniture. With staircases that seem to ascend forever, plenty of hidden corners and architectural idiosyncrasies, 37 Spital Sq is a house that invites you to ramble around – which is exactly what I did yesterday, matching up pictures in the Society’s archives of the building in 1981 with the same spaces as they are now.
1981
2013
Huguenot silk weaver Peter Ogier is believed to have built 37 Spital Square in the seventeen-forties.
You may also like to read about
Philip Venning, former Director of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings
Bill Crome, the Window Cleaner who sees Ghosts in Spital Sq
and these other renovations in Spitalfields
I looked around this house last year during Open House weekend and found it fascinating. If it’s open to the public again this year (21-22 Sept) I would definitely recommend a visit. Loved the courtyard garden.
another excellent post, very well put together. Really liked the before and after pictures and admired Joanna Moore’s lovely drawing. I too visited 37 Spital Square in Open House weekend last year and agree with Vicky above.
What a marvelous revamp…I could live there…GORGEOUS…
Fantastic to see these old photos – I especially loved the ones of the courtyard as I’m the SPAB gardener. I’ll be there tomorrow planting herbs mentioned by 17th century local resident Nicholas Culpeper. We’re restricted to ones that can cope with shady conditions though! That glass building at the back stops the direct sun reaching the garden…
I am an SPAB scholar from 1989. This is such a dear place to me, your post took me back to memories all the way from Istanbul. And so exciting to see the old photos. Thanks.
Ps: this www is a good thing! No?
Wonderful before and afters. There’s a beautiful portrait of William Morris (my personal hero!) there too.
Isnt that hulking glass monolith awful & totally out of scale.What an amazing restoration,bit of a shame it isnt a house though.I love reading Spitalfields life.
How wonderful to see a building alive again! Full of light and smiling faces. 🙂
What a lovely piece. My very last job in London before I returned to Scotland was working as Secretary to the SPAB Mills Section, I was in the office right at the top of the building. I can remember sometimes having to climb up the little wooden steps into the attic space to look for old Mills Section Newsletters and pamphlets. The building used to creak at night so could be quite creepy – I don’t miss being last one out and having to set the alarm!
The drawing of the building is lovely, just as I remember the interior from my days there and I passed many a pleasant lunch break sitting in the garden. An oasis of calm in a mad city. I was in London with my husband the week before Easter and took a walk round Brick Lane and Spitalfields in the dark, it was nice to see this elegant building again. It felt very much like a house when you were working there despite being offices.
Spitalfields was a happy time for me and I was glad to pay a recent visit to old haunts.
Thanks for the memories Gentle Author.
REF: 37 Spital Square
Hi – amazing pictures, my 2nd great grandmother (Bertha Grief) was a servant here (according to 1891 census) at that time the house was owned by a large family – their family name was Magnus. The head of the family was a book manufacturer and a couple of his sons were his assistants, but he also had a daughter, Rosetta, who was listed as a Pianist. Very interesting and helpful. Thank you for putting these pictures on here – I guess you never know who will be interested in them!
Fascinating for me to see these details because I had a general practice surgery opposite at no.4 Spital Square , which is now I think part of a huge bank building . At the north west corner of the square was a bombed site ,unoccupied for about 35 years where on Sunday mornings an escapologist used to struggle free from huge chains locked around him. Next to that was the site of War Graves Commision yard for producing the headstones –did they end up in France? Next to our modern house was the Wholesale Cooperateive vegetable store .
There was usually a definite smell of tobacco from the factory in Fournier Street, mingling with the Spitalfields fruit and veg ! Additionally we had clouds of blackish smoke drifting from Liverpool Street main line trains .
My practice was started by Dr William Parry who died in 1947 from Tuberculosis and my father Dr Walter Lascelles took over until I qualified at St Bartholomew’s Hospital and entered general practice in 1955 .
How wonderful to see this building renovated and preserved. My ancestors were Huguenot and Walloon silk Merchants and weavers
I was born in 1947 and my family lived in Commercial St until 1960. It is
the other side of the
Market. I seem to remember Dr Lascelles was our G.P.