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Greenland Dock is the oldest of London's riverside docks, located in Rotherhithe in the area of the city now known as Docklands. Now used purely for recreational purposes, it is one of only two working enclosed docks on the south bank of the River Thames.

1 Howland Great Wet Dock


The dock was originally built around 1698 by the aristocratic Russell family of the Duke of Bedford. The Russells had been given a portion of land in lower Rotherhithe by a wealthy Streatham landowner, John Howland, as part of a wedding dowry for his daughter Elizabeth, who married Wrothesley Russell, the Marquis of Tavistock. They immediately set about "improving" the rural property, obtaining parliamentary permission in 1695 to construct a rectangular dock with an area of about 10 acres (40,000 m²), capable of accommodating around 120 ships. It was named Howland Great Wet Dock in honour of John Howland.

In a picture of about 1717, it can be seen in a rural setting some miles outside the (much smaller) city of London, lined with trees on three sides (to act as windbreaks) and with the Russell family's mansion situated at the western end. Unlike the later docks, it was not built with cargo traffic in mind; it did not have walls, warehouses or other commercial facilities. Instead, it was promoted as being capable of accommodating ships "without the trouble of shifting, mooring or unmooring any in the dock for taking in or out any other". It was essentially a re-fitting base where ships could be repaired and berthed in a sheltered anchorage. It was aided in this regard by its proximity to the dockyards at Deptford

2 The whaling and timber trades


Howland Great Wet Dock was sold by the fourth Duke of Bedford in 1763. It came to be used by the whaling ships which operated principally in the North Atlantic around Greenland, prompting its renaming to Greenland Dock. For the remainder of the 18th century, it was used to refit whaling ships and as a location for the boiling of blubber to produce oil. However, this trade declined sharply by the start of the 19th centuryAlternative meaning: Nineteenth Century (periodical ( 18th century — 19th century — 20th century — more centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 19th century was that century which lasted from 1801- 1900. Events The Little Ice Age ended.

In 1806Events January 8 Cape Colony becomes a British colony January 10 Dutch in Cape Town surrender to the British January 19 The United Kingdom occupies the Cape of Good Hope March 23 After traveling through the Louisiana Purchase and reaching the Pacific Ocea the dock was sold to William Richie, a GreenwichThis page is about Greenwich in England. For other uses see Greenwich (disambiguation Greenwich (pronounced "Grennitch" or "Grinnitch") is a town, now part of the southeastern suburbs of London in the London postal district SE10, on the south bank of the timber merchant and founder of the Surrey Commercial Dock Company . The Company built a series of additional docks and timber ponds while rival companies built additional docks, leading to the jumble of harbours, canals and timber ponds that collectively made up the Surrey Commercial DocksThe Surrey Commercial Docks were a large group of docks in Rotherhithe on the south bank (the Surrey side) of the Thames in east London. The docks operated in one form or another from 1696 to 1969. Most were subsequently filled in and redeveloped for resi. Greenland Dock remained at the centre of London's timber trade for well over a century to come. It was lined with warehouses and immense piles of timber or "deal", which were maintained by the athletic deal porters. Much of the timber arrived aboard small sailing vessels from the BalticBaltic can refer to: The Baltic Sea Council of the Baltic Sea States an intergovernmental organization Baltic sea countries countries with access to the Baltic Sea The term Baltic countries is sometimes used more or less synonymously for Northern Europe ( region, although these were eventually displaced by large steamers.



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