Rotherhithe and Seafarers
Today Rotherhithe remains very much a separate community with
a character of its own. Bounded by the Thames on one side,
and on the other by the waters of the Surrey Commercial docks,
it is easy to understand its long tradition of seafaring and
all that has to do with ships. In 1620, when it was the home
of Christopher Jones and others associated with the Mayflower,
the neighbourhood was even more isolated. Rotherhithe, or by
its old name Redriffe, consisted only of Rotherhithe Street,
the longest Street in London, which follows the great bend
of the Thames and is built on the river embankment.
At this time the heart of the village of Rotherhithe was the
parish church of St Mary the Virgin. There had possibly been
a church on this site since Saxon times; the building standing
in 1620 dated from at least the early 12th Century. The list
of rectors goes back to 1282. The Church's position on the
river bank, made its tower a welcome landmark to homecoming
sailors. The lovely building which stands on the same site
today dates mainly from 1714, but a number of memorials preserved
from the earlier church provide evidence that this was a parish
of seafarers. A finely sculptured stone relief of a ship in
full sail, nearly contemporary with the Mayflower, commemorates
Captain Anthony Wood who died in 1625. The epitaph of Captain
Roger Tweedy who died in 1655, leaving 'Two Shillings every
Lord's day forever to be distributed among twelve poor seamen
or seamen's widows in bread', is obviously that of a Rotherhithe
Sailor:
'His soul a ship with graces fully laded
Through surges deep did plough and safely waded.
At Rotherhithe he did at length arrive
And to their poor his tribute fully gives
And in this port he doth at anchor stay,
Hopefully expecting Resurrection's day'.
Rotherhithe men who were not sailors were shipbuilders and
their wooden sailing ships looked a fine sight at anchor in
the Thames. In 1612 Rotherhithe received recognition as an
official centre of the shipwright's craft when a charter was
granted to 'The Master, Wardens and Commonality of the Art
or Mystery of Shipwrights of Redrith in the County of Surrey'.
Even in the 17th Century there was a dry dock at Rotherhithe.
In 1700, the first of the great wet docks was constructed,
known originally as the Howland Great Wet Dock after the Howland
family who were the landowners at that time. Its purpose was
to provide safe harbourage for ships, which had earlier been
forced to anchor in mid river and suffer buffeting by storms.
It came to be known by its present name, the Greenland dock,
after 1725 when the South Sea Company leased it for the Greenland
whaling trade. The other docks, which made up the 365 acres
of the Surrey Commercial Docks, were constructed in the 19th
Century.
Rotherhithe and the Pilgrim Fathers
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