Reference Number: L0102/3
Date: 1 December 1808
Extent: 1 print
Materials: Paper
Size: 275x330mm
Provenance: Presented to Lloyd’s by E S Lamplough, 1926

Description: The East India Company managed the Indian Ocean slave trade. It is estimated that European traders exported c.500,000-750,000 slaves from the Indian Ocean to the Americas between 1500 and 1850, alongside slave trading within the Indian Ocean. East India House was the London headquarters of the East India Company, from which much of British India was governed until the British government took control of the company’s possessions in India in 1858 after the Indian Uprisings of 1857. It was located in Leadenhall Street. In 1796, the Company purchase, ed an additional plot of land and work began to extend its premises. The designs and project was started by Richard Jupp and completed by Henry Holland in 1799. This coloured print shows the frontage of the building on Leadenhall Street, looking towards Bank, which was sold in 1861 and soon after destroyed. By 1922, Lloyd’s were aware that they needed larger and modern premises and had started negotiations for part of the site. Lloyd’s moved to Lime Street in 1928 in a building designed by Sir Edwin Cooper. This aquatint print shows the Sale Room at East India House drawn by Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827) and Augustus Charles Pugin (1762-1832), aquatinted by J C Stadler. It was published from R Ackermann’s ‘Repository of Arts, 101 Strand’ and appeared in his publication ‘The Microcosm of London’, 1808. Rowlandson drew the figures and Pugin drew the architectural setting. A view of Lloyd’s Subscription Room was published in the same volume and a print is in Lloyd’s Collection: Ref.: L0108.