Sell or Buy a property
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0203 089 3770
Property Auction East Ham
Landmark Auctions UK Ltd was formed in 2006 to bring homeowners and businesses, individual and unique Sash Windows in East Ham. Our windows and doors are handcrafted at our fully equipped workshop in Barkingside, by joiners with exceptional experience and training. Members of our skilled team are FENSA registered.
Our company is renowned for combining the latest technology with traditional design to make elegant windows that stand the test of time. All our sash and casement windows perform high in terms of energy efficiency, and our doors meet high-security standards.
Auction Guide
These guides are to help you through the process of selling, buying and bidding at auction.
Sell Now
If you haven’t got time to wait for our next auction date to sell your property, we can offer you a free cash valuation.
Valuations
Interested in finding out much your property is worth? Our team are here to help with no obligation.
Online Auctions
Landmark Auctions have a wealth of experience in the property and auction industry and pride ourselves in offering the best service, whether you are selling or buying with us.
Our auctions are in-house, online and live streamed across the country. Each auction offers residential and commercial property, development, investments and land.
We will guide you through the auction with all the information you need.
Landmark Auctions – are focused
on selling property nationwide.
Other Areas Nearby East Ham We Cover:
Facts about East Ham
General Info
East Ham is a district of the London Borough of Newham, England, 8 miles east of Charing Cross. East Ham is identified in the London Plan as a Major Centre.As of 2010, East Ham has the fourth-highest level of unemployment in Britain, with 16.5 percent of its residents registered unemployed. Around 7 in 10 children living in East Ham are from low-income families, making it one of the worst areas in the country for child poverty.
History of East Ham
The first known written use of the term, as ‘Hamme’, is in an Anglo-Saxon charter of 958, in which King Edgar granted the Manor of Ham, which was undivided at that time, to Ealdorman Athelstan. A subsequent charter on 1037 describes a transfer of land, which has been identified with East Ham, indicating that the first division of the territory occurred between 958 and 1037.
The place name derives from Old English ‘hamm’ and means ‘a dry area of land between rivers or marshland’, referring to the location of the settlement within boundaries formed by the rivers Lea, Thames and Roding and their marshes. North Woolwich seems likely to have been removed from Ham in the aftermath of the Norman Conquest.