• Playwright and associate of Shakespeare
Thomas Middleton lived in the area in later life and was buried in St Mary's Churchyard when he died in 1627. • The
Forty Elephants or Forty Thieves were an 18th to 20th century all-female London crime syndicate who specialised in shoplifting. They operated from the Elephant and Castle and were allied to the Elephant and Castle Mob led by the McDonald brothers.
Shirley Pitts was "educated" by the gang, while
Alice Diamond was one of its leaders, in the first half of the 20th century. • Fanny Blood, a friend of
Mary Wollstonecraft's, met in 1775, lived in Newington Butt. In 1777, Wollstonecraft persuaded her family to move to Walworth. She soon became a lodger of philosopher
Thomas Taylor and his family, in Manor Place. Taylor became her tutor and by 1778, she was working as a paid companion for him. She moved in with the Blood family in 1782. • The mathematician
Charles Babbage was born in
Walworth in 1791 and was baptised at St Mary's Newington. The family lived at 44 Crosby Row, which is now called Larcom Street. A blue plaque is visible at the corner of Larcom Street and Walworth Road. • In the middle of
Elephant Square, is the
Michael Faraday Memorial, a large stainless steel box built in honour of
Michael Faraday, who was born nearby in 1791. It contains an
electrical substation for the
Northern line. Alternative DJ
Aphex Twin has long been rumoured to have lived for some time inside the monument, although this story has been debunked. He is also rumoured to have lived in a disused bank building on Newington Causeway (now demolished) in the 1990s. •
Elhanan Bicknell was a businessman and shipowner. He became one of the leading collectors of contemporary British art. Around 1809, he entered into partnership with his uncle John Walter Langton who was a tallow chandler at Newington Butts. The firm, which was located opposite St Mary's Church, become the leading oil merchants and
spermaceti refiners in London by 1835. A friend and close business associate there at Newington Butts was fellow oil merchant and shipowner,
Thomas Sturge, who was also a cement manufacturer, railway company director, social reformer and philanthropist.
Thomas Sturge the elder had founded what was to become Thomas Sturge & Sons in the early 1780s. The business remained there until the 1840s. • The inventor of the periodic table,
John Newlands, was born on 26 November 1837, in West Square, just behind the Bethlem Hospital, which now houses the
Imperial War Museum. • On 18 March 1861, renowned
Particular Baptist preacher
Charles Spurgeon moved his congregation to the newly constructed purpose-built
Metropolitan Tabernacle, which seated 5,000 people with standing room for another 1,000. It was the largest church edifice of its day. Spurgeon remained in charge of the church until his death in 1892. •
Liberal politician,
banker and
City merchant
James Daniel Gilbert was born on 5 February 1864 and subsequently brought up in the ward of West Newington, which he later came to represent at the
London County Council. • Communist militant and trade union leader
Jack Dash was born in Southwark on 23 February 1907, and grew up on Rockingham Street. • Gangster "Mad"
Frankie Fraser was born on Cornwall Road in
Waterloo,
London. At the age of five, he moved with his family to a flat on the Walworth Road. • Actor
Tod Slaughter took over the Elephant and Castle Theatre from 1924 until several months before its closure in 1927. His company revived Victorian "blood-and-thunder" melodramas to enthusiastic audiences. Slaughter also staged other types of production such as the annual Christmas pantomime, where he would cast prominent local personalities in bit-parts for audience recognition. • By at least 1924, Barbadian-born physician,
Pan-Africanist and co-founders of the
League of Coloured Peoples Cecil Belfield Clarke practised at 112
Newington Causeway, as he would do for the rest of his professional career. He may have practised there as early as 1920. • English comedian, actor, writer and singer
Charlie Drake was born there on 19 June 1925. • On 17 January 1932, agriculturalist and Labour Co-operative politician
Denis Carter was born in Elephant and Castle, where his parents, Albert and Annie Carter, worked in a tea warehouse and as an office cleaner, respectively. • Speedway rider
George Barclay was born in Elephant on 1 April 1935. • Actor
Alan Ford, who was born in Camberwell on 23 February 1938, grew up on the area. • Rock singer
Terry Dene was born in Lancaster Street on 20 December 1938. • Actor
Windsor Davies taught English and Maths at a school in Elephant and Castle. • Journalist and war correspondent
David Blundy grew up near Elephant and Castle in a house that was also the location of his father's antique store. • DJ, club promoter and music producer
Jeff Dexter was born 15 August 1946 in
Lambeth Hospital and grew up in
Newington Butts, moving to Camberwell Road when he was ten years old. • In 1956,
Austin Osman Spare moved to a flat situated above the loading bay of a
Woolworths store at 56a Walworth Road. Aged 17, in May 1904, he had held his first public art exhibition in the foyer of the Newington Public Library on the same road. •
Charlie Chaplin and
Michael Caine, who were born and grew up locally. •
Charlie Mullins OBE, the founder of Pimlico Plumbers, was born 28 October 1952 and grew up on the Rockingham Estate. • Footballer
Tommy Langley was born in Elephant on 8 February 1958. • In December 1962,
John Major started work at the
London Electricity Board. • Actress and television presenter
Lisa Maxwell was born in the area on 24 November 1963, where she was raised by her single mother and her grandparents. • Trade Unionist
Steve Turner grew up on the now demolished
Heygate Estate. • Irish writer and novelist
Darren O'Shaughnessy, who was born in 1972, spent the first six years of life in Elephant, going to the English Martyrs' RC Primary School from the age of three. • Actress
Nicola Stapleton was born in Elephant on 9 August 1974, grew up near East Street and attended Townsend Primary School. • In 1975, in his mid-twenties, gay American artist and writer
Philip Core settled permanently in London, living in a flat in Elephant and Castle that was painted completely black. • Rapper
Jahaziel was born on 26 July 1976 and was raised in the area. • In 1979,
David Bruce started his first
Firkin Brewery brewpub in Elephant and Castle. • During the 1980s,
Mark Ashton lived in a council flat in Claydon House on the
Heygate Estate, which is where he formed with his friend Mike Jackson the group
Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners in 1984. • Horse racing announcer
Mark Johnson attended the then
London College of Printing, receiving a bachelor's degree in television, film, and theatre studies, and a postgraduate diploma in radio journalism. •
Joy Crookes was born in the
Lambeth district of
South London on 9 October 1998 and grew up in the area of Elephant and Castle, where she spent eight years at a Catholic state primary school. • In October 2004, Richard Reynolds, a then resident of
Perronet House, launched GuerrillaGardening.org as a record of his solo attempts at
guerrilla gardening. The site launched the trend in the UK and world. • Gay rights activist
Peter Tatchell lives on the Rockingham Estate, where the Council installed a blue plaque in his name in 2010. • In 2012, Anglican priest, journalist and broadcaster,
Giles Fraser became the priest-in-charge at St Mary's, Newington. •
Arsenal footballer
Reiss Nelson was born in Elephant and Castle. • Circuit Judge Sir (Anthony) Mark David
Havelock-Allan, 5th Baronet, QC, FCIArb, lives in the area with his second wife Alison née Foster, whom he married 1986. • Academic, author, and broadcaster
Kieran Maguire was born in the Elephant and Castle to Irish parents.
Dante Gabriel Rossetti and
Fanny Cornforth, who apparently took her nickname "elephant" from the place, as well as
Elizabeth Siddal,
Samuel Palmer,
George Tinworth,
Robert Browning,
Sarah Wardroper and
Octavia Hill are also thought to have lived in the area. ==In popular culture==