Tooting Broadway's vintage street features are not limited to fine ghost signs. Immediately outside the station is a magnificent cast-iron lamp, serving not one but three purposes. First, it offers light - indeed, a cluster of five lamps on ornate, swirling branches.
Second, just below the lamps are signs pointing the way to London, Wimbledon, Wandsworth and Croydon.
The third feature is less obvious at a glance. Look more carefully at the base, though, and you will see that it is made up of four ventilation panels. These originally provided fresh air to toilets below, although those facilities are now gone.
I couldn't spot a foundry mark on the lamp (although my search did harvest a few odd looks from passers-by!). However, it is quite similar to a combined lamp and ventilation shaft on Strand, opposite the Royal Courts of Justice. In fact, the resemblance is great enough that it is probable they were made by the same firm, Walter Macfarlane of Glasgow. The addition of the signs, though, makes Peckham's example a little bit more special.
Tooting's lamp/signpost/ventilation cover is so special, in fact, that it is Grade II listed. Not bad for a piece of Victorian street furniture.
4 comments:
Absolutely love the lamppost but ask when it was first erected no dates given
It's late nineteenth century, but I don't know the exact date.
Thanks Caroline! Your post was a nice jumpstart for a Wikipedia-article. We always joke about articles of lampposts. So, I decided to write an article about a lamppost. You can find the article at https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straatlantaarn_bij_Tooting_Broadway (Dutch).
Thanks for this Caroline. I was able to answer a question on Facebook because of this coverage. I've seen then often and wondered. I really feel they deserve grade 1 listing in a city that keeps pulling things down.
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