Sub-fonds
London Bridge Waterworks Company; Corporate records
Catalogue reference: ACC 2558/LB/01
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This record is about the London Bridge Waterworks Company; Corporate records.
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Reference (The unique identifier to the record described, used to order and refer to it)
- ACC 2558/LB/01
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Title (The name of the record)
- London Bridge Waterworks Company; Corporate records
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Held by (Who holds the record)
- London Metropolitan Archives: City of London
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Language (The language of the record)
- English
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Creator(s) (The creator of the record)
- <corpname>London Bridge Waterworks Company</corpname>
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Administrative / biographical background (Historical or biographical information about the creator of the record and the context of its creation)
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The first supplies pumped by mechanical means in London began on Christmas Eve 1582 using a waterwheel situated on London Bridge. The works were destroyed in the Great Fire of London but were rebuilt and eventually (1761) supplied parts of Southwark on the south bank of the Thames as well as the City. In 1822 the Act to build a new London Bridge was passed and the Works were closed down. The Company was acquired by the New River Company which had for a long time been its main competitor. Most of the surviving records date from the second half of the eighteenth century to 1822. Records of the annuity paid to its shareholders exist into the twentieth century.
The distinction of being the first to supply London houses with water by mechanical means goes to a certain Peter Morris, a land drainage engineer and a servant of Sir Christopher Hatton, the Lord Chancellor. His nationality is uncertain. Stow describes him both as a Dutchman and a German. Negotiations between Morris and the City started in 1574 but it was not until 1581 that he was granted a five hundred year lease of the first arch at the northern end of old London Bridge to house a tide wheel driving pumps of his design. In 1582 he obtained a similar lease of the second arch to accomodate another wheel. These enabled him to supply houses in the southern and eastern parts of the City. The works were destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666 but their reconstruction was authorised by Act of Parliament in the following year. In 1701 the lease of the fourth arch of the bridge was granted to Morris's grandson, Thomas. Morris and his family sold the undertaking for £38,000 to Richard Soame who also acquired a forty three lease of the City conduit waters and an undertaking at Broken Wharf, near St Paul's, started in 1594 by Bevis Bulmer, a mining engineer, for the supply of the western end of the City. The whole was united into a partnership called "The Proprietors of the London Bridge Water Works" and was subsequently divided into 1,500 shares of a nominal value of £100 each.
By the mid eigteenth century the waterworks consisted of five water wheels occupying three arches and driving sixty four small pumps. Some 1,500,000 gallons a day were pumped on an average. In 1761 a lease of the third arch of the bridge was obtained for the purpose of affording a supply to Southwark. In 1767 two further arches were leased, the fifth from the northern end and the second from the southern end of the bridge, the latter being used in place of the third for the Southwark supply. Among the eminent engineers consulted as to the effect of these additions on the structure of the bridge and on the navigation were Brindley, Smeaton and Robert Mylne, the architect of the Blackfriars Bridge and later engineer to the New River Company.
A steam engine was installed at the northern end of the bridge about the year 1762 in order to assist the supply at the turn of the tide.
At the beginning of the 19th century the works are stated to have been capable of furnishing a supply of nearly four million gallons a day. The great fall of water occasioned by the water wheels endangered navigation through the bridge and in 1822 an Act was passed for their removal. To ensure the supply of water, provision was made for the undertaking to be conveyed to the New River Company who forthwith began to dismantle the wheels.
The old bridge was taken down in 1831 and replaced with one designed by John Rennie, this survived until 1968.
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Record URL
- https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/6a89a2b0-64fe-4314-8699-5c6b5da555bd/
Catalogue hierarchy
This record is held at London Metropolitan Archives: City of London
Within the fonds: ACC 2558
THAMES WATER PREDECESSORS
You are currently looking at the sub-fonds: ACC 2558/LB/01
London Bridge Waterworks Company; Corporate records