Blackwall Tunnel Northern Approach, E14

PLACE NAME

So called after the embankment that was built to hold back the black river, the Thames. The wall was constructed as part of plans to drain the land so that building could take place in the marshy area. It was first mentioned in 1377 as Blakewall or Blakewale. It was made up of two Old English words blœc and wall. The 1,350-metre-long Blackwall Tunnel under the River Thames was opened on May 22, 1897 by the then Prince and Princess of Wales. It connects Blackwall Point in Greenwich with the East India Dock Road in Poplar and was built by Sir Alexander Binnie, who was later the chief engineer behind Greenwich foot tunnel in 1902 and Vauxhall Bridge.

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