24/08/2025
🧱 The Day London’s Bricklayers Saved a City..
In the mid-1800s, London faced a crisis. The River Thames, choked with sewage, reeked so badly during the Great Stink of 1858 that Parliament itself could barely sit. Cholera outbreaks swept through the city. Something had to be done.
Enter Sir Joseph Bazalgette and one of the most ambitious bricklaying projects in history, the construction of London’s vast Victorian sewer system.
This photo captures a moment in that colossal task: teams of bricklayers shaping massive triple-arched tunnels entirely by hand. No machinery, no laser levels, just trowels, string lines, and the kind of skill that only comes from years of hard graft.
Every curve had to be perfect. The bricks, often London stock brick, were carefully set to create a self-supporting arch that could last centuries. These men worked in mud and foul air, often waist-deep in water, yet their precision was remarkable. Over 318 million bricks were laid for the sewers, and much of that brickwork is still in use more than 150 years later.
At Bricklayers Online, we celebrate this kind of mastery, the quiet heroes whose craft shapes the world beneath our feet. The Victorian sewer bricklayers were more than tradesmen; they were engineers in their own right, building with accuracy that modern bricklayers still admire.
The next time you walk through London, remember: far below your feet runs a network built by hand, brick by brick, by men who defined what skill in masonry really means. And here at Bricklayers Online, we’ll keep telling their stories, because bricklaying history is worth preserving, one tale at a time.