'London Stone' is the name given to a number of
boundary stones which stand beside rivers in south east
England.
History
Until
1350 the
the English Crown held the right to fish the rivers of England and charged
duties on those people it licenced to fish. In
1197 King Richard I, in need of money to finance his involvement in the
Third Crusade, sold the rights over the lower reaches of the
River Thames to the
City of London. Marker stones were erected to indicate the limit of the City's rights.
In
Victorian times, the
Lord Mayor would come in procession by water and touch the Staines stone with a sword to re-affirm the City's rights.
Control of the river passed in turn from the City to the
Thames Conservancy, the
Port of London Authority (below Teddington) and finally to the
Environment Agency.
Staines

London Stone, Staines

London Stone, Yantlet Creek

London Stones, Lower Upnor
In medieval times before the canalisation of the Thames,
Staines was the highest point to which tides reached. It was also the next bridge upstream from
London Bridge, a distance of 31 km
as the crow flies. The London Stone here marked the upstream limit of the City's rights. It was originally erected in
1285 near Staines Bridge. This is confirmed by the semi-circular indentations (on the right hand face in the photo). These were created by the tow ropes of horse-drawn boats rubbing against the stone.
In
1750 (approx.) the stone was moved about 500 metres upstream to a site at on the north bank of the river in the Lammas Pleasure Ground. Later the stone was moved to the Old Town Hall Arts Centre, Market Square, Staines and a replica was placed in the Pleasure Ground.
The stone proper is only about 60 cm high. Any inscription it may once have had has worn away. It stands on a plinth inscribed with the names of various City worthies who may have been involved in its 1750 move. Martin Nail included the Stone as No. 83 in his list of
Coal and Wine Tax Posts since it happens to stand on the line of route of the posts.
Yantlet Creek
The downstream limit of the City's rights is about 54 km as the crow flies (an appropriate phrase! - see below) from London Bridge and is marked on both banks of the river. On the south bank the marker is the London Stone which stands at beside the mouth of
Yantlet Creek on the
Isle of Grain.
The overall height of the monument is about 8 metres. The main column has an inscription, now illegible. The plinth on which it stands has an inscription listing various worthy gentlemen who were probably involved in the re-erection of the stone in Victorian times. They include
Horatio Thomas Austin and
Warren Stormes Hale, sometime Lord Mayor and founder of the
City of London School.
Crow Stone
The marker on the north bank is almost due north of Yantlet Creek and is called the 'Crow Stone' (also known as Crowstone or City Stone). It stands at on the mud opposite the end of
Chalkwell Avenue,
Southend-on-Sea (two nearby roads are called Crowstone Avenue and Crowstone Road). It was erected in 1837 and replaced a smaller stone, dating from 1755. The older stone was removed to Priory Park in Southend where it remains today.
The line between the Crow Stone and the London Stone, Yantlet Creek is known as the 'Yantlet Line' and is used as the boundary for various things including the
Port of London Authority.
Upnor
Two London Stones stand at between the
Arethusa Venture Centre and the
River Medway in
Lower Upnor. The older, smaller stone is dated
1204 and carries on its rear the inscription "God bless the City of London". Apart from that the inscriptions are both stones are merely the names of various Lord Mayors and years.
References
★
Spelthorne Borough Council interpretation board in Lammas Pleasure Ground.
External links
★ Pages on
geograph for:
London Stone, Staines, the
Crow Stone,
London Stone, Yantlet Creek
★
Google search for "Yantlet Line"
★ The PLA page of
thames.me.uk