Hackney Museum

Hackney Museum Sharing the rich, diverse and inspiring histories of our amazing Borough.

🗄️This set of eel trays was once used in the famous F. Cooke's Eel, Pie and Mash Shop at 9 Broadway Market, originally o...
28/05/2026

🗄️This set of eel trays was once used in the famous F. Cooke's Eel, Pie and Mash Shop at 9 Broadway Market, originally opened by Frederick Cooke in 1900.

Since the mid-19th century, pie and mash shops have been an iconic staple for London. F Cooke's Eel, Pie and Mash was a family run business which helped define East End food culture in London for many generations. During their heyday in the mid 1900s, there were around 12 shops running across London, including on Kingsland Road in Dalston and Hoxton Street.

One of the delicacies served in the shops were eels, which were a popular street food since the 1800s. Eels were cheaper than red meat and were a standard snack for working class Londoners. These eels were commonly served stewed or jellied.

The eels served in pie and mash shops were caught in the Thames or were imported from countries like the Netherlands. They were stored in eel trays which were kept at the back of the shop with a continuous flow of water from water tanks to keep them alive and fresh.

In 2020, after 120 years of service, Broadway Market's F Cooke's shop closed its doors for the final time, leaving the Hoxton Street shop as the last Cooke shop left open today.

Images:
🗄️Set of eel trays from F. Cooke's Eel, Pie and Mash Shop, Hackney Museum 2026.21
📸 Shopfront of ‘F.COOKE, LIVE EEL IMPORTER' at 41 Kingsland High Street, famously known as ‘the Buckingham Palace of Pie & Mash shops’. Courtesy of Chris Cooke.
📸Workers preparing jellied eels in the kitchen of F. Cooke's eel pie and mash shop in Hackney. Courtesy of Fred Cooke.
👜Paper bag for F. Cooke & Sons on Kingsland Road. Hackney Museum 1997.29
🏮Lantern that was displayed outside Cooke's Eel Pie and Mash shop on Kingsland High Street. Hackney Museum 1997.27

Like many of the social housing estates across the country built following the Second World War (1939-1945), the Gascoyn...
20/05/2026

Like many of the social housing estates across the country built following the Second World War (1939-1945), the Gascoyne One estate in south Hackney represented the dreams and social vision of urban planners.

Around 30 Victorian villas with large gardens were demolished to make way for the Gascoyne Estate, creating nearly 300 homes. For the first residents in the late 1940s and early 1950s, the estate was a paradise. It provided quality homes, gave shelter, provided a refuge from poverty, discrimination, and even civil wars, to generations of residents from around the world.

The estate's management changed over time and this brought both challenges and opportunities. Residents campaigning for change were a driving force on the estate and at its core was an active Tenants and Residents Association.

In the last 25 years Hackney has become one of the most sought after places to live, with the steepest house price rises in the country. This has brought new individuals and communities into both the borough and the Gascoyne Estate.

📸 Illustration from the Tenants and Residents Association newsletter showing the strained relationship between residents and Hackney Council, 1992.
📸 View of land by Gascoyne Road and Well Street Common, where the estate was built, c.1913. Hackney Archives P7541.
📸 The construction of Gascoyne Estate, 1947. Courtesy of London Archives.
📸 John Crowley with his son John, 117 Gascoyne House. c.1956. Courtesy of John Di Carlo.

Taking part in this weekend’s Hackney Half Marathon or another Hackney Moves race? You’re following in the footsteps of ...
15/05/2026

Taking part in this weekend’s Hackney Half Marathon or another Hackney Moves race? You’re following in the footsteps of the 20,000 people who ran on the streets of Hackney and East London 40 years ago.

The fourth East London Half Marathon in 1986 coincided with Sport Aid’s ‘Race Against Time’ 10k. The half marathon raised money towards a therapy pool at London Hospital and kicked off the Hackney Sports Festival with events like a judo competition, volleyball display and a table tennis tournament.

The Sport Aid 10k race was one of over 200 simultaneous runs happening across the globe to raise funds for famine relief. In the end, at least 100 of these medals were not used in the East London Half Marathon, as there were far fewer participants than expected. Many people went to the Hyde Park Sport Aid run, which was taking place on the same day.

🏅 East London Half Marathon 1986/Sport Aid medal, Hackney Museum 1987.4
📰 Newspaper articles from the Hackney Gazette 30 May 1986, courtesy of Hackney Archives

#1986

Hackney Moves

Hackney Archives

It's been 100 years since the 1926 General Strike. Strike action in Hackney affected local industries and services, incl...
08/05/2026

It's been 100 years since the 1926 General Strike.
Strike action in Hackney affected local industries and services, including the newspaper printers. All that was printed each day was a single news page, such as this one, printed during the middle of the strike. The paper urged the public to carry on as normal, and services were asking for volunteers in replace of the workers.
The General Strike was a sympathy strike called by the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in support of the coal miners who were facing pay cuts and longer working hours. Around 1.7 million workers across the UK striked during this time, including workers in Hackney.
In Hackney, a Council of Action was set up on Kenmure Road, which helped set up the strike locally for workers in the area.
The famous slogan of the strike was: “Not a penny off the pay, not a minute on the day”

01/05/2026

Yesterday we returned the Weinberg Printing Press to the Jewish Museum London after over quarter of a century on display at Hackney Museum! 👋

Weinberg's Printing Press was a Jewish printing business in Shoreditch from around 1912 until 1987.

In the late 1800s, Jewish refugees escaping persecution in Tsarist Russia settled in Shoreditch. Bartnett Weinberg set up his printing press to meet the needs of this community, producing a wide range of material, from Bar Mitzvah cards to membership cards for the Jewish Bakers’ Union.

🙏 Thank you to the Jewish Museum for loaning us this amazing collection for more than two decades!

Flower Power🌷In the 1800s, it was very fashionable for women to wear artificial flowers on their hats and clothes, espec...
23/04/2026

Flower Power🌷
In the 1800s, it was very fashionable for women to wear artificial flowers on their hats and clothes, especially at springtime which is when the London social season started.

Rather than working in factories, women could work from home to make these artificial flowers using different shaped tools to create the various flower parts.

This specialist trade was mostly based in Hoxton. At its height, there were 4,011 flower makers in London.

The trade declined after the First World War when the elaborate flower decorations were viewed as old fashioned.

Happy Birthday to Rio Cinema! This month marks 50 years since the independent, community-run cinema was formed in 1976.T...
20/04/2026

Happy Birthday to Rio Cinema! This month marks 50 years since the independent, community-run cinema was formed in 1976.

To celebrate, we are sharing some of our favorite objects from The Rio from our collections.

- Rio Presents Badge, 1980s.
- Girls Just Wanna Have Fun! poster, 1988
- Judwaa film poster, 1997.

Say cheese!📸From the 1870s until the 1890s, John Eason and his two sons Arthur and Henry ran a photo studio based at 16 ...
09/04/2026

Say cheese!📸

From the 1870s until the 1890s, John Eason and his two sons Arthur and Henry ran a photo studio based at 16 Dalston Lane. Eason & Co captured a diverse, artistic and playful community living in East London in the late 19th century. Sitters included music hall artists, Salvation Army delegates from China and India and whole families for significant life events.

The Easons took photographs with creative flair, leaving us with a memorable and sometimes surreal record of life in Victorian Dalston.

👉🔗 Discover the stories behind the portraits in our blog: Eason & Co. – A Victorian Photo Studio in Dalston: https://hackney-museum.hackney.gov.uk/2026/03/26/eason-co-dalston-photography/

📸 - Copyright Bridgit Anderson & Jim Four
1. A girl with a cat on her head, Hackney Museum 2011.128.
2. Wong Ock, Hong Joug, Wing Wong, delegated at the Salvation Army conference. Hackney Museum 2011.116.
3. Music hall star The Great Atroy. Hackney Museum 2011.121.4.
4. Mr Selta with a dog. Hackney Museum 2011.120.5.
5. Mrs Litchfield and son dressed in the nautical theme, Hackney Museum 2011.134

30/03/2026

A Woman’s World by Mary Watts, 1967 🎨

Mary Watts was a very talented local Hackney painter, who entered the Hackney Arts Festival in the 1960s. This was a local showcase exhibiting artworks, music, and theatre performances.

She also regularly entered ‘The People’ newspaper’s annual Exhibition of Housewives Art competition, and in 1967 her entry, A Market Place, won top prize. She received high praise from art critics such as Sir John Rothenstein, at that time, Keeper of the Tate Gallery.

‘A Woman’s World’ and the prize-winning ‘A Market Place’ were purchased by the London Borough of Hackney through the Chalmer’s Bequest Fund and added to its art collection.

👉 This yellow badge featuring two women was produced to mark a Black and Ethnic Minority Women's Conference was held at ...
25/03/2026

👉 This yellow badge featuring two women was produced to mark a Black and Ethnic Minority Women's Conference was held at Hackney Town Hall on 24 March 1985. Organised by Hackney Council and Hackney Racial Equality with support from the Greater London Council (GLC), topics discussed included Childcare, Employment and Training (with Ayse Masan of the Union of Turkish Women in Britain), Housing and Funding.

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