Walking the City of London

Month: July 2025

My visit to Cutlers’ Hall – swords, stained glass and much more.

One of the great pleasures of writing this blog is that every now and again I get a nice surprise. In February of this year I wrote about the wonderful terracotta frieze on Cutlers Hall

Subsequently, I received a kind invitation from Richard Herbert, a Past Master of the Cutlers’ Company, to visit the Hall and have a tour. We finally managed to get together last week and here’s my report.

At the front door I encoutered two of the literally hundreds of elephants that seem to occupy almost every corner of the building (including the soft furnishings!)

The cosy welcoming lobby …

Cutlers are known to have been practising their craft in London from at least the 2nd or 3rd century AD. Indeed, the word ‘cutler’ is derived from the Latin ‘cutellarius’ through the Old French ‘coutelier’ and signifies a maker or seller of knives and weapons with a cutting edge. Although cutlers traded in all manner of cutting instruments, it was their skill at producing fighting weapons that brought them wealth and prosperity. From earliest times until the end of the 16th century, with wars in France and internal civil wars, the demand for edged weapons was both constant and profitable. Only later did the emphasis shift from implements of war to cutlery and other domestic wares such as razors and scissors.

On 4th December 1416, the year following the battle of Agincourt, Henry V granted to the Company its first Royal Charter. This can be no coincidence, for the King had assembled his army in haste, and this was the only Livery Company to which he granted a Charter. One can speculate that the grant may have been made in part payment for arms supplied.

Stained glass in the entrance hall representing the granting of the Charter …

The Company continued to prosper, and in 1515 it was ordained that they should be placed 18th in the order of precedence of the City Companies, where they remain to this day. Over the years various monarchs have cancelled and reissued the Charter; the one under which the Company operates today was granted by James I in 1606 …

A ‘House of the Cutlers’ was recorded in 1285, just off Cheapside. By the early 15th century they had moved to a building on Cloak Lane, near Cannon Street. In 1660 their hall was in dire need of a rebuild, therefore the money was raised and the hall rebuilt on the same site. The final bills were paid in June 1666 only for the hall to be destroyed in the Great Fire of London three months later

Rebuilding started once again and the next hall was finished in 1670. Their bad luck continued however as, in 1882, the site was compulsorily acquired by the Metropolitan and District Railway Company and the hall was knocked down. This is when they moved to their current site and had their new hall built. The new Hall was designed by Mr. T. Tayler Smith, the Company’s Surveyor, and came into use on March 7th 1888. Above the door is the Cutlers’ Company French motto – To Succeed through good faith

The coat of arms displays three sets of crossed swords, a reference to their trade …

At the top is an elephant with a castle on its back. This is a heraldic symbol representing strength, but also a nod to the ivory that would have once used in the handles of their cutlery. Thankfully, of course, the use of ivory today is illegal.

Their string of bad luck fortunately came to an end in World War Two. The Hall amazingly managed to survive the bombs of the Blitz that flattened much of the area around it. It was more or less just Cutlers’ Hall and St Paul’s Cathedral that survived in this corner of the City. A high explosive bomb did destroy the entire building next to it on the 10th May 1941, bringing down the hall’s North wall. The damage however was repaired and the hall brought back into use …

My tour of the building was conducted by Beadle Tiago Lucas whose enthusiasm and vast knowledge of the building and the Company made this a real treat. Space doesn’t allow me to repeat all I saw and learnt here so here are some highlights.

Every December brings the traditional ‘Feast of the Boar’s Head’, commemorated here in this painting …

… and by this chap who greets you on the way up the stairs …

At the foot of the stairs …

The Hall is home to a number of very interesting collections.

Graham duHeaume excavated nearly 900 knives from the foreshore of the River Thames between 1970 and 1986. He generously donated the bulk of his collection to the Company in 2020 …

Examples of beautifully carved handles and, in the drawers beneath, the Company also possesses a fine collection of City of London, Livery and Guild-related medals and badges from their origins in the 17th. century to the present day …

You can view the collections in detail online here.

Presentation swords (with our reflection, whoops!) …

This exhibit tells a story …

Swords belonging to Viscount Montgomery of Alamein and The Duke of Cambridge …

Along with the latter’s interesting history …

A sword, said to have belonged to the son of King Edward III – Edward of Woodstock – better known as The Black Prince …

The magnificent Livery Hall, its main feature being its Victorian hammer beam roof …

Mounted high on the end wall above the canopy hangs a Barge Banner used for the Lord Mayor’s procession in 1763 when the Lord Mayor was Alderman Bridgen, a Cutler. The banner depicts the Arms of the Company and the City, Britannia, the Wand of Mercury, Roman Fasces and the Wand of Aesculapius …

The representation of the Stuart Arms is believed to date from about 1670-88 and to have been carved by a contemporary of Grinling Gibbons, who for a time resided in the Company’s premises at the ‘Belle Sauvage’ Inn on Ludgate Hill …

The hall has a fantastic selection of stained glass, for example cutlers going about their trade …

And Masters’ Coats of Arms from earlier Halls …

Right back to the seventeenth century, in fact …

Along with some vandalism, where an 18th century member has scratched his name on the glass, maybe using a diamond on a ring …

Not to be forgotten is the fact that charitable giving is an incredibly important part of the Company’s overall purpose and you can read more about this here. Also, you can use this link to read more about the annual Contemporary Cutlery Design competition along with images of winning designs. My favourite is the 2021 winner Hand by Anli Hou

I enjoyed my visit enormously. The relatively small size of the Hall means it manages to perform a difficult trick. It is not only friendly and intimate, but also suitably impressive, representing the long and prestigious history of the Company.

You can read more about the Company and the Hall (which is available for hire) here.

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The delightful Cartier Exhibition at the V & A. Plus last chance to object to the awful redevelopment of Liverpool Street Station.

You can read more about this monstrous development later in today’s blog – and we only have until the end of the day tomorrow to object …

First of all, however, to lift your spirits, the delights of the Cartier exhibition!

Charting the rise of Cartier from its inception in 1847 to becoming ‘the jeweller of kings and king of jewellers’, the exhibition looks at the evolution of the house’s legacy in art, design and craftsmanship since the turn of the 20th century, and detail how the three grandsons of founder Louis-François set out to create the first globally recognised jewellery house.

Nothing quite prepared me for the experience of seeing these Cartier creations ‘in real life’ so to speak rather than in photographs. Mind-blowing craftsmanship combined with extraordinary wealth, the exhibition not only displays these pieces brilliantly, it also in many cases names the clients who commissioned them (but doesn’t snitch on them as to what they paid!).

The exhibits are cleverly lit in rooms with subdued lighting so you can see them in all their glory. This, unfortunately, makes photography difficult so the blog will be a combination of images that I took along with some from other sources.

These words ring down the decades, one of the most famous speeches in recent British history. In it King Edward VIII (soon to be known as the Duke of Windsor) declared:
‘I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility and to discharge my duties as king as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love.

Both Edward and Mrs Simpson had a passion for jewellery and in 1940 he had Cartier create for her The Flamingo Brooch …

The bird is meticulously fashioned from diamonds, rubies, and sapphires, ‘capturing its graceful elegance’.

Strangely there are not all that many images online of her wearing it.

A Panthère clip brooch sold to the Duke of Windsor in 1949, presumably a gift for Wallis (Photography: Nils Herrmann for Cartier Collection) …

The Patalia necklace, commissioned by the Maharaja Bhupinder Singh of Patiala in 1928 …

In 1968, the extravagant Mexican actress María Félix ordered a snake necklace from Cartier. The ingenuity of the design makes it a unique piece in the history of jewellery. Thousands of hours of work and great expertise were put into making this 57-centimetre long reptile, with an entirely articulated structure paved with 2,473 diamonds …

A better image from a Cartier magazine …

Two more exhibits where, unfortunately, I forgot to make a note of the description …

Crash wristwatch, Cartier London, 1967. (Photography: Vincent Wulveryck for Cartier Collection). Shades of Salvador Dalí …

The Tutti Frutti bandeau, made in 1928 for Lady Mountbatten, is on long-term loan to the V&A (Photo: Victoria and Albert Museum, London) …

Not surprisingly, tiaras feature strongly, and this is just a small selection.

Tiara, Cartier Paris, 1908. Photography: Marian Gérard for Cartier Collection …

The Manchester Tiara was made by Cartier, Paris, in 1903 to the order of Consuelo, Dowager Duchess of Manchester. Cartier’s records note that she supplied over a thousand brilliant-cut diamonds and more than 400 rose-cut diamonds, while Cartier supplied further rose-cut diamonds and the paste stones which make up the scrolls at the end of each side …

Cartier London aquamarine and diamond tiara. It’s one of the 27 tiaras that Cartier made in 1937, most of which were worn at that year’s coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. Photography: Vincent Wulveryck for Cartier Collection …

Panther bangle, Cartier Paris, 1978.Photography: Marian Gérard for Cartier Collection …

There is also a collection of Mystery Clocks. The first of these were released in 1912 and were given this name as their hands appear not to be connected to any movement. A Model A mystery clock, Cartier Paris, 1914. Photography: Nils Herrmann for Cartier Collection …

The exhibition runs until 16th November 2025 – highly recommended. I suggest you arrive early as it gets rather crowded.

The threatened redevelopment of Liverpool Street Station

Almost exactly two years ago I reported on the proposed threat to Liverpool Street Station and this has not gone away! If you have not yet objected to the monstrous block they want to plonk on top of Liverpool St Station, the deadline is tomorrow, 4th July.

Ten days ago there were only 180 objections versus 613 comments in favour but thankfully there are now 782 objections versus 670 comments in favour. This is astonishing progress.

Yet if we are to stop this appalling development, we have to far surpass those comments in favour and we have until the end of tomorrow to do this. Please encourage your friends, family, neighbours and colleagues to object.

CLICK HERE TO LEARN HOW TO OBJECT EFFECTIVELY

The Monster Block

I started today’s blog discussing the wonder of the work of Cartier, but would like to finish with an acknowledgment of the elegance and beauty of Victorian architecture. Here it is perfectly illustrated in this 1962 linocut of Liverpool Street Station by Edward Bawden

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