Ball's Pond

Balls Pond Road Cemetery is a Jewish cemetery on Kingsbury Road, Dalston (London, England). It was founded in 1843 and is owned by West London Synagogue. The last burial was in 1951. Prominent burials include the writer Amy Levy whose ashes are interred at the cemetery.

In London Labour and the London Poor:

The Blind Street-Seller of Boot-Laces. (Volume 1)

Baldwin's Gardens

Baldwin's Gardens is a road running between Gray's Inn Road and Leather Lane in the modern borough of Camden (London, England). It was named after Queen Elizabeth I's gardener, Baldwin.

In London Labour and the London Poor:

Of the Life of a Blind boot-lace Seller. (Volume 1)

OF THE WOMEN STREET-SELLERS. (Volume 1)

Baker Street

Baker Street is a street in Marylebone in the City of Westminster (London, England). It is famous for being the fictional home of the detective Sherlock Holmes, created by Arthur Conan Doyle, who lived at 221B Baker Street in the stories. Baker Street is named after builder William Baker who laid out the street in the eighteenth century.

In London Labour and the London Poor:

OF THE WOMEN STREET-SELLERS. (Volume 1)

Of the Children Street-Sellers of London. (Volume 1)

Of the Number of Street Stalls. (Volume 1)

Bagnigge-wells station

Clerkenwell Police Court was a magistrates court originally established in Hatton Garden, St. Andrew Holborn. In approximately 1841 it was transferred to Bagnigge Wells Road, which was renamed King's Cross Road in 1863. Per a 2005 archeological survey, the police court was probably designed by Charles Reeves, "in yellow brick with stucco decoration" and "originally contained to the rear a courtroom and cells accessible from Bagnigge Wells Road as well as offices for magistrates and police inspectors" (Cohen & Westman).

The British Museum

The British museum is the national museum of England. The museum serves as a place of many strides in science and the humanities, including archaeology and biology. The museum was first established by an act in Parliament in 1753 (The British Museum). The museum also served as a center of many cultures around the world, but was the first museum that drew the question of ethical consumption of art from countries without explicit permission.