Painted on the side of the former St George’s Town Hall (now a library), this large mural commemorates the riots that took place here in October 1936, when the British fascist Oswald Mosley led a bunch of his blackshirt thugs into the area to intimidate the local Jewish population. They were repelled by local people – Jews and non-Jews alike.
Cable Street Mural
Lonely Planet's must-see attractions
23.64 MILES
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3.07 MILES
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4.61 MILES
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5.08 MILES
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3.7 MILES
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2.96 MILES
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11.01 MILES
Where else in London can you size up an 18th-century 10-storey Chinese pagoda and a Japanese gateway while finding yourself among one of the world’s most…
Nearby attractions
0.08 MILES
This church was erected by Nicholas Hawksmoor in 1729 and badly damaged in the Blitz. All that now remains is a shell enclosing a smaller modern core.
0.5 MILES
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0.55 MILES
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0.57 MILES
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0.6 MILES
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0.61 MILES
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0.63 MILES
William Booth, the founder of the Salvation Army, preached his first streetside sermon outside this pub in 1865. It's also famous as the place where…
0.64 MILES
A statue of the Salvation Army founder, erected near the place where he gave his first streetside sermon.
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- path: Destinations/POIs/superzone
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