place

Foresters Music Hall

Bethnal GreenBuildings and structures demolished in 1964Demolished theatres in LondonFormer cinemas in LondonFormer music hall venues in the United Kingdom
Use British English from December 2025

Foresters Music Hall, also known as The Artichoke Music Hall, Royal Foresters Music Hall, New Lyric Music Hall, and New Lyric Theatre, was a music hall and later cinema located at 93 Cambridge Heath Road in Bethnal Green, London, United Kingdom. It was active as a theatre for live performances from 1850 until 1912 when it was converted into a cinema. One of London's first cinemas, it operated until closing its doors in 1917. It re-opened as Foresters Super Cinema in 1925. It showed films until it closed in 1960. The building was demolished in 1964.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Foresters Music Hall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Foresters Music Hall
Cambridge Heath Road, Greater London Bethnal Green

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Foresters Music HallContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.522222222222 ° E -0.055555555555556 °
placeShow on map

Address

Cambridge Heath Road
E1 5RZ Greater London, Bethnal Green
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Frank Dobson Square
Frank Dobson Square

Frank Dobson Square is a public square in Whitechapel, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It commemorates the life and work of British artist and sculptor Frank Owen Dobson. The square was constructed by the London County Council in 1963, the year of Dobson’s death, at the junction of Cambridge Heath Road and Cephas Street. Dobson had been born in Clerkenwell. The centrepiece of the square was the ‘Woman and Fish’ fountain, a sculpture designed and completed by Dobson in 1951. The sculpture had been purchased for the borough by London County Council in 1963.The ‘Woman and Fish’ had provided drinking water until 1977, when the fountain was seriously damaged in an act of vandalism. In 1979, the sculpture was temporarily removed from the square for restoration, following further vandalism when the head of the statue was removed. In 1983, the statue was again vandalised and subject to further repairs. In 2002, the fountain was removed from the square altogether, following another act of vandalism which left it damaged beyond repair. The piece is now on the list of lost pieces of public art in London. In December 2006, the artist Antonio Lopez Reche was given a grant by the Tower Hamlets Council Art Department to reproduce the 'Woman and Fish' statue, following Dobson’s original design. However, unlike the original statue the reproduction was cast in bronze, patinated and contains no fountain. Today, Frank Dobson Square stands empty, Reche's 'Woman and Fish' having been installed in Millwall Park, Tower Hamlets.

Siege of Sidney Street
Siege of Sidney Street

The siege of Sidney Street of January 1911, also known as the Battle of Stepney, was a gunfight in the East End of London between a combined police and army force and two Latvian revolutionaries. The siege was the culmination of a series of events that began in December 1910, with an attempted jewellery robbery at Houndsditch in the City of London by a gang of Latvian immigrants which resulted in the murder of three policemen, the wounding of two others, and the death of George Gardstein, the leader of the Latvian gang. An investigation by the Metropolitan and City of London Police forces identified Gardstein's accomplices, most of whom were arrested within two weeks. The police were informed that the last two members of the gang were hiding at 100 Sidney Street in Stepney. The police evacuated local residents, and on the morning of 3 January a firefight broke out. Armed with inferior weapons, the police sought assistance from the army. The siege lasted for about six hours. Towards the end of the stand-off, the building caught fire; no single cause has been identified. One of the agitators in the building was shot before the fire spread. While the London Fire Brigade were damping down the ruins—in which they found the two bodies—the building collapsed, killing a fireman. The siege marked the first time the police had requested military assistance in London to deal with an armed stand-off. It was also the first siege in Britain to be caught on camera, as the events were filmed by Pathé News. Some of the footage included images of the Home Secretary, Winston Churchill. His presence caused a political row over the level of his operational involvement. At the trial in May 1911 of those arrested for the Houndsditch jewellery robbery, all but one of the accused were acquitted; the conviction was overturned on appeal. The events were fictionalised in film—in The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934) and The Siege of Sidney Street (1960)—and novels. On the centenary of the events two tower blocks in Sidney Street were named after Peter the Painter, one of the minor members of the gang who was probably not present at either Houndsditch or Sidney Street. The murdered policemen and the fireman who died are commemorated with memorial plaques.