We understand
that moves are foot to change the name of the bit of river which runs from
the tip of the Greenwich Peninsula to Charlton.
The historic name is ‘Bugsby’s Reach’
and in the days when the river was the River and had real ships on it, this was a place name which sailors worldwide
would have recognised and it appears in a great deal of maritime literature in
the 19th and early 20th centuries.
To be fair
however to those who want to change the name – it more properly refers to
‘Bugsby’s Hole’. Those of you who knew
Greenwich Peninsula before 2000 will remember that The Pilot Inn once stood in
a road which went down to the river.
Going out into the river was a long jetty and basically the road and the
jetty were going to Bugsby’s Hole. So
what was all that about?? There are a number of ‘holes’ in the river and it is
a traditional term meaning ‘an anchorage’.
So we are looking for someone called Bugsby who had an anchorage
somewhere off the Greenwich Peninsula
The name
‘Bugsby’ has been the cause of a great deal of speculation, most of which does
not seem to have got very far. Maybe
there are people out there who can comment and who know much more than I
do.
First, I think,
we need to establish how long this name has been in use. We know that earlier this part of the river
had an entirely different name. It was once called Cockle's Reach or Podd's
Elms Reach. The ‘Roque map’ from 1744 shows a great semi circle of trees
stretching across both sides of Horn Lane (Horn Lane still runs as a derelict
pathway parallel to Peartree Way’)
The earliest
reference to the name of ‘Bugsby’s Hole’ seems to be a report in the 'Gentleman's Magazine' of March 1735 to
'Williams the pirate' being hung in chains at Bugsby's Hole'. Williams,
incidentally was dead when he arrived here to be gibbetted – have died by
hanging with due ceremony at Execution Dock in Wapping. As a further diversion from my main subject
it might be of interest to know that Williams had been convicted at a specially
convened Admiralty Court for “running away with
the ship Buxton Snow, late Captain Beard, bound from Bristol
to the Island of Malemba Angola in Africa, and selling the Ship; and
also the Murder of the said Captain Beard, by cutting his Throat with an
Axe”.
I also think
that we need to look quickly at the geographical context of the Bugsby’s
Hole. I think it is a given that the
Greenwich Peninsula was at that time cut off and fairly inaccessible from the
land (it was a gated area with its own staff) – but every river has two
banks? On the north bank of the river
from about 1617 was the East India Company Yard. By the mid-18th
century it was in private hands as the great Blackwall Yard – world famous – then
the largest ship building and repair establishment on the River. High tech – cutting edge –vessels in the
yard, and in the river, - vessels which were going off to conquer the world.
Don’t take this lightly – a considerable chunk of the modern world was
developed there. Whoever Bugsby was
he/she must have been part of this.
F.W. Nunn
discussed the question of Bugsby’s identity in the Kentish Mercury of 5th January 1923. 'Who was Bugsby?The article quoted
A.G.Linney who, he says, referred to Bugsby in The Lure and Lore of London's River, and suggests that he was a
market gardener. He also cites a 'book published about a hundred years ago'
which talked about a robber who had 'a cabin' in the osier beds and who, in
order to 'escape the vengeance of the law' 'cast himself into the river' and
that later 'much treasure was found'.
I have tried to
find out about this, and failed. The
records for the Greenwich Peninsula and its riverside, covering this period are
very good. I have spent some time going
through the records of what was then St. Alfege Parish, through the minute
books of the City Conservators and – most importantly – struggled through the
handwriting of the Wallscot Minutes, the body who managed Greenwich Marsh. And I found nothing – there is loads of
information in the Wallscot minutes if it is nettle and bramble growth in
drainage channels you want, but nothing about pirates hiding in the reeds – who
I guess wouldn’t have remained hidden from the marsh bailiff and his staff for
long, never mind the soldiers guarding the Government Gunpowder Works at what
is now Enderbys.
So – all we
really have in answer to ‘Who Was Bugsby??’ is a lot of speculation.
Some of that
speculation has been around bugs and bugaboos and ghosties – and relates to the
aforesaid gibbets. It has been suggested
it is really ‘Bugs Marsh’. This is the subject of an article by Muriel Searle
in 'The Importance of being Bugsby' (Port of London January 1975) – and the
same theme flung into hyper inflationby Iain Sinclair in 2000 in the London Review of Books.
Some other
speculation has been around the place name ending ‘by’ which apparently refers
to a Scandinavian root. Was it a
Scandinavian farm, the author suggested?
I would however
like to point to a couple more issues.
The name ‘Bugsby’ is fairly unusual.
A brief trawl of it on Google will show you that the name is more common
in the United States and the West Indies than it is in the UK. Perhaps that might point again to a link
with all those big vessels from Blackwall Yard – or even the activities of some
of Thomas Williams’ friends on the high seas on the other side of the Atlantic. And dare we mention a possible link with the
slave trade??
The other thing-
which I think is strange – is that round the world there are other ‘Bugsby’s
Holes’. The nearest is to the west of Sheerness on that crumbly bit of the
coast where anything that was there in the 18th century is now well
out at sea. I have been down to see and
it looks nothing like Greenwich. There
are however others, for instance on St. Helena.
This, I think, leads me back to my original point – and why I think the PLA and Waterman’s’ Company should not be allowed to change the name. All of these associations, the date and everything connect back to when ‘Bugsby’s Hole’ along with ‘Blackwall Fashion’ were names known to sailors and adventurers around the world. They relate to when Thames shipbuilders developed amazing vessels which soon ruled (and plundered) the world. It isn’t just about the Navy and Nelson and all that – it is also about trade, and economic thrust. But while we might want to distance ourselves from the politics of empire and exploitation, surely we can respect the technologies developed by a hierarchy of shipwrights, artisans and others- along our bit of the river. Our comfortable lives derive directly from them.
In the early 20th century there was a whole lot of romantic literature written about the river and the ‘great days of sail’ – W.W.Jacobs conflated with Treasure Island.. I wouldn’t necessarily want to go down that route myself but it is one with which Bugsby as a name is associated – and it is an attractivemedium to many people – and – er – tourists.
As for me – I will keep on with the research.Who was Bugsby?
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