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Tower Hill

Tower Hill is the area surrounding the Tower of London in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is infamous for the public execution of high status prisoners from the late 14th to the mid 18th century. The execution site on the higher ground north-west of the Tower of London moat is now occupied by Trinity Square Gardens.

For other uses, see Tower Hill (disambiguation).

Tower Hill rises from the north bank of the River Thames to reach a maximum height of 14.5 metres (48 ft) Ordnance Datum.[1] The land was historically part of the Liberties of the Tower of London, an area the Tower authorities controlled to keep clear of any development which would reduce the defensibility of the Tower. Building has encroached to a degree, but a legacy of this control is that much of the hill is still open. The hill includes land on either side of the London Wall, a large remnant of which is visible.[2]

1381 – , Archbishop of Canterbury[4] (beheaded by an angry mob)

Simon Sudbury

1381 – [4]

Sir Robert Hales

1388 – [4]

Sir Simon de Burley

1388 –

John de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Beauchamp (fourth creation)

1397 – , 11th Earl of Arundel[4]

Richard Fitzalan

1440 – Rev. Richard Wyche, Vicar of [4]

Deptford

1462 – , 12th Earl of Oxford[4]

John de Vere

1462 – Aubrey de Vere, eldest son and heir of , 12th Earl of Oxford

John de Vere

1462 –

Sir Thomas Tuddenham

1462 – William Tyrrell

1462 – John Montgomery

1470 – , 1st Earl of Worcester[4]

John Tiptoft

1495 – [5]

Sir William Stanley

1497 – ,[5] a commander of the Cornish Rebellion of 1497

James Tuchet

1499 – [5]

Edward Plantagenet, 17th Earl of Warwick

1502 –

James Tyrrell

1510 –

Edmund Dudley

1510 –

Sir Richard Empson

1521 – , 3rd Duke of Buckingham[5]

Edward Stafford

1535 – , Bishop of Rochester[5]

John Fisher

1535 – ,[5] ex-Lord Chancellor

Sir Thomas More

1536 – , brother of Anne Boleyn

George Boleyn

1537 – [5]

Thomas Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy de Darcy

1538 – , Earl of Devon[6]

Henry Courtenay

1538 –

Edward Neville

1539 –

Sir Nicholas Carew

1539 -

Henry Pole, 1st Baron Montagu

1540 – [6]

Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex

1540 – [7]

Walter Hungerford, 1st Baron Hungerford of Heytesbury

1547 – [6]

Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey

1549 –

Thomas Seymour, 1st Baron Seymour of Sudeley

1552 –

Sir Ralph Vane

1552 –

Sir Thomas Arundell of Wardour Castle

1552 -

Sir Michael Stanhope

1552 – [6]

Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset

1553 -

John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland

1554 – [6]

Sir Thomas Wyatt

1554 –

Lord Guildford Dudley

1554 - [8]

Henry Grey, 1st Duke of Suffolk

1572 – [6]

Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk

1601 –

Sir Christopher Blount

1615 –

Sir Gervase Helwys

1631 – , 2nd Earl of Castlehaven

Mervyn Tuchet

1641 – , 1st Earl of Strafford[6]

Thomas Wentworth

1645 – , Archbishop of Canterbury[9]

William Laud

1651 – , Presbyterian minister

Christopher Love

1662 – [9]

Sir Henry Vane

1683 – [9]

Col. Algernon Sidney

1685 – [9]

James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth

1716 – , 3rd Earl of Derwentwater[9]

James Radclyffe

1716 - [10]

William Gordon, 6th Viscount of Kenmure

1746 – , 4th Earl of Kilmarnock

William Boyd

1746 – Robert Boyd (of )

Clan Boyd

1746 – , 6th Lord Balmerino

Arthur Elphinstone

1747 – [9]

Simon Fraser, 11th Lord Lovat

Public executions of high-profile traitors and criminals, often attainted peers, as well as innocent Catholics in the 16th century, were carried out on Tower Hill (some others were carried out within the confines of the Tower of London itself). The backgrounds to those carried out at Tower Hill ranged from the Peasants’ Revolt of 1381 to the Wars of the Roses; Lollardism; claims to the throne by Perkin Warbeck and Lambert Simnel; the English Reformation; the Pilgrimage of Grace; the Monmouth Rebellion; the Jacobite Rising and the Gordon Riots of 1780. Lord Lovat's execution for high treason in 1747 was the last judicial beheading in England while the final executions on Tower Hill were hangings in 1780. Some 120 executions are chronicled and they include:-

Trinity Square and Gardens[edit]

After the abandonment of Tower Hill as a site for public executions, Trinity Square and Gardens were laid out in 1797 by Samuel Wyatt as the setting for Trinity House, completed a year earlier as headquarters of the Corporation of Trinity House.


In the 1880s, a section of the London Underground Circle Line was constructed beneath Trinity Square Gardens. In the first decade of the 20th century small buildings, courts and yards bordering Trinity Square were cleared to make way for the construction of the Port of London Authority headquarters at 10 Trinity Square. Begun in 1912 and completed in 1922, the Grade II* building is now a Four Seasons hotel which opened as such on 26 January 2017.[11]


The Merchant Navy Memorial, First World War section, Grade I-listed, was unveiled by Queen Mary (deputising for her husband, King George V) on 12 December 1928.[12] To avoid overshadowing this, the Grade II* Second World War section is In the form of a sunken garden and was unveiled by HM The Queen on 5 December 1955[13] while that commemorating merchant seamen killed in the 1982 Falklands War was unveiled on 4 September 2005 by the First Sea Lord, Admiral Sir Alan West.

Tower Hill Trust[edit]

In October 1933, Reverend P B (“Tubby”) Clayton of All Hallows by the Tower and Dr B R Leftwich published “The Pageant of Tower Hill”, which included the outline of a scheme to improve Tower Hill. In December 1933 the inaugural meeting of the Tower Hill Improvement Fund was held. Lord Wakefield was elected president and launched an appeal at the Guildhall in January 1934.[14]


One of the Trust's first actions was to create a beach on the north bank of the Thames between St Katherine's Steps and the Tower for families from the East End.[14]


In 1937 the Fund became the Tower Hill Improvement Trust and set about purchasing a number of buildings it considered eyesores. These were demolished in order to provide gardens and open public spaces. Among the buildings demolished was the giant Myer's tea warehouse, which stood next to All Hallows and blocked the view of the Tower from the west.[14]


During 2001-2003 the Trust part-financed the refurbishment of Trinity Square Gardens.[14]


In June 2006 the Trust's name was shortened to Tower Hill Trust.[14]

Tower Hill (the street)[edit]

The street of Tower Hill, within the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, adjoins the City of London at Byward Street and runs eastwards to Minories and Tower Bridge Approach. It replaced Postern Row in the 1880s and was widened and extended a decade later.[15][16][17] Tower Hill is in the London congestion charge zone from its junction with Minories westwards.


A pedestrian subway links Tower Hill tube station to the boundary of the Tower of London where the remains of the south tower of the medieval postern gate are visible.

Tower Hill Terrace and Tower Vaults[edit]

Tower Hill Terrace is the pedestrian way that runs south off Tower Hill to Gloucester Court and also the adjoining paved public space, redeveloped in 2019, atop the Tower Vaults shopping complex.[18] A floor plaque in Tower Vaults commemorates its re-opening in 1991 as the surviving part of the 1864 George Myers built Mazawattee Tea Warehouse, extensively bomb-damaged in Second World War air raids and later demolished.


No. 7 of the original 31 Tower Liberty boundary markers is sited at the bottom of the steps linking Gloucester Court to Tower Hill Terrace and no. 8 is positioned at the base of the circular concrete air duct adjoining Tower Hill.[19]

Former Pump House[edit]

The grade II listed former pump house (Tower of London shop) was built in 1863 and designed by the architect Anthony Salvin.[23]

Public transport[edit]

London Buses route 15 east to Blackwall and west to Trafalgar Square runs along Tower Hill. Tower Hill tube station is adjacent and Tower Gateway DLR station close by as is Tower Pier for London River Services.

Media related to Tower Hill at Wikimedia Commons

The changing face of Tower Hill as portrayed by old maps