Latitude: 50.7803 / 50°46'48"N
Longitude: -1.0684 / 1°4'6"W
OS Eastings: 465774
OS Northings: 98266
OS Grid: SZ657982
Mapcode National: GBR VVN.4Z
Mapcode Global: FRA 87N0.TVS
Plus Code: 9C2WQWJJ+4J
Entry Name: Lamp columns to esplanade, east of South Parade Pier
Listing Date: 18 March 1999
Last Amended: 30 March 2023
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1387217
English Heritage Legacy ID: 475144
ID on this website: 101387217
Location: Portsmouth, Hampshire, PO4
County: City of Portsmouth
Electoral Ward/Division: Eastney and Craneswater
Parish: Non Civil Parish
Traditional County: Hampshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Hampshire
Church of England Parish: Southsea St Margaret of Scotland
Church of England Diocese: Portsmouth
Tagged with: Streetlight
Lamp columns. Erected in around the early C20 probably by Drew-Bear, Ransome and Perks, Engineers, London.
Lamp columns. Erected in around the early C20 probably by Drew-Bear, Ransome and Perks, Engineers, London.
MATERIALS: cast-iron columns with glass lanterns.
DESCRIPTION: eighteen lamp columns spaced at intervals. Each a tall round column with an ornate fluted pedestal with a moulded base and cap upon which is set a bulbous iron leaf motif surmounted by a further fluted column, then the main cast-iron column which has a Corinthian capital two-thirds up. The top of the column is surmounted by ornate moulded and fretted ironwork with the Portsmouth City crest at the centre and paired swan neck arms supporting two lanterns. Original lanterns are hexagonal iron-framed glass lanterns. The pedestal of the columns hold the manufacturers plate and another Portsmouth city crest. Some of the lanterns have broken, missing or replacement parts, or have undergone repair. These lamp columns are currently (2022) numbered 15 to 32.
In the early C19 Southsea began to develop as a residential suburb of Portsmouth and a seaside resort. Southsea Common was subsequently laid out as a pleasure ground with Clarence Esplanade constructed in 1848 and housing development to the north and east of the common in the mid-C19. Eastney developed to the east of Southsea largely between the late C19 and early C20. The esplanade between Southsea and Eastney was laid out in the late C19 and early C20, as indicated by historic OS maps. A series of cast-iron decorative lamp columns were erected at this time. The 1898 OS map (1:2500) shows possible markers for lamp columns at Southsea, although this is not clear. Eastney Esplanade developed in the early C20 and any columns there were erected during that period, although it is also possible that all the lamps along the Southsea and Eastney seafront were added at the same time in the early C20.
The lamp columns, erected in around the early C20 on the Portsmouth seafront, are listed at Grade II for the following principal reasons:
Architectural interest:
* as highly decorative lamp columns displaying a significant degree of architectural embellishment and high-quality moulded and fretted ironwork;
Group value:
* as part of a large group of 62 lamp columns on the Southsea and Eastney seafront, all of which are Grade II-listed, and with the numerous designated buildings, structures and gardens along the seafront.
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