Vintage Photographs Capture the Gritty Reality of Life in London's East End During the 1960s

   

Between 1963 and 1969, Steve Lewis, a former photographer for The Sun and the Newham Recorder, captured the East End of London in all its dilapidated glory. As the images graphically illustrate, the pop revolution and the early stirrings of flower power had little discernible impact on the working-class Cockney. East Enders were preoccupied with other concerns: widespread poverty, poor housing, industrial unrest, and racial tension.

Many of the locations in which Lewis worked have changed beyond recognition. Tower blocks supplanted swathes of Blitz-scarred terraces; docklands was recast as the capital's alternative commercial hub. As the old fabric of the East End was consigned to memory, so were many of its traditions. Here is a glimpse of the way it was.

 
A publican serves a glass of stout to a donkey

 

 
Two police officers administer a Breathalyser test to a driver on Finden Road in Newham

 

A rag-and-bone man on his rounds

 

A girl takes her pet sheep for a walk

 

A row of Nissen huts in Stratford

 

A homeless family in a halfway home

 

Three children build themselves a go-cart

 

A Percy Dalton's peanut seller at the dog track

 

Gypsy families

 

The last man to live in a Nissen hut built during the war in Stratford

 

A milkman on his rounds

 

Gypsy families on Beckton Marshes

 

Two elderly ladies chatting

 

A little girl pushes her teddy bear past a wheelchair-bound gentleman on Vicarage Lane

 

Three men playing cards in a pub

 

The winner of the Miss Newham 1969/70 beauty contest

 

Pensioners' card school

 

Queen's Road Market in the London borough of Newham

 

 
A boy and a girl playing on a motor scooter parked on an East London street

 

 
Pearly Kings and Queens