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Ratcliff or Ratcliffe is a former hamlet which now is a section of the contemporary city of London, England, and is located in Stepney near the River Thames.
History
Ratcliffe in earlier times was also known as "sailor town". Located on the edge of Narrow Street on the Wapping waterfront it was made up of lodging houses, bars, brothels, music halls and opium dens. This overcrowded and squalid district acquired an unsavory reputation with a large transient population. In 1794 approximately half of the hamlet was destroyed in a fire even so it continued as a notorious slum into the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Ratcliff became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Stepney in 1900.
The hamlet of Ratcliff covered 111 acres and had a Census population of:
- 1801: 5,666
- 1811: 6,998
- 1821: 6,973
- 1831: 9,741
- 1841: 11,874
- 1851: 15,212
- 1861: 16,874
- 1871: 16,131
- 1881: 16,107
- 1891: 14,928
- 1901: 14,810
See also
References
- Statistical Abstract for London, 1901 (Vol. IV).
External links
- Ratcliffe http://www.eolfhs.org.uk/parish/ratcliff.htm
- Ratcliffe http://www.eastlondonhistory.com/ratcliff.htm