


The third photograph (above) is a slightly
later (c. 1905) postcard of Dulwich Village,
also occasionally called its High Street,
which formed the commercial heart of the area
and still has an above average number of traditional
independent shops.
The Crown and Greyhound on the right has been
the pre-eminent inn for the whole of the twentieth
century.
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Three
photographs of the Village from the same era.
The first is of a postcard view of the Greyhound,
which was the pre-eminent inn in Dulwich Village
for most of the 19th century and was patronised
by important national figures of the day,
especially from the literary arena.
Its fortunes declined in the later 19th century
and it was bought by the licensee of the Crown
opposite in 1895. Both were demolished and
the 'Crown and Greyhound' erected on the Crown's
site.
The second photograph shows The French Horn
Inn, which occupied a central position at
the south end of the village and played an
equally central role in the area's history.
The inn, previously called The Bricklayer's
Arms, was the first meeting place for a newly
endowed school of 1741. This endowment has
evolved into Dulwich Village Infants' School,
Dulwich Hamlet School and James Allen's Girls
School.
The inn became The French Horn in 1755 and
was used as a coaching inn. It ceased to be
an inn in 1814 and the site today is occupied
by the house, Rokeby. |