View of shops at 43-73 Borough High Street, Southwark. Number 69-73 are encased in scaffolding and is a three-storey bank building for Lloyds Bank, built in 1928. The building remains a Lloyds Bank. Outside a man is crossing the road. Number 67 a three-storey building with a decorative weather vane on the roof. Built in the late-nineteenth century by William Henry and Herbert Le May; on the top floor a large plaster frieze is inscribed WH & H LeMay Hop Factors, decorated with two figures picking hops. Above the arched doorway another frieze, WH & H LeMay Hop Factors. Hop factors represented growers, selling hops to dealers who would in turn sell them on to brewers. The building is Grade II listed, number 1378356. Number 65 is a three-storey building, with a shop 'WINKLEY and Son Stationer Established 1920 'on the ground floor. The earliest known occupant of this building, John Slade (1773), was a grocer. Number 63 a four-storey building, with the ground floor occupied by Rymans, Stationers. This site was previously occupied by another stationers, Strakers, which had been established in 1863 and was still family owned when it was sold in 2003 for £80million. These buildings remain but are altered. On the left of number 63 an entrance to a passageway leads to White Hart Yard, formerly the site of the White Hart Inn. The White Hart was the badge of Richard II and the sign of this inn probably dated from his time. In 1450 the inn was the headquarters of Jack Cade, which is mentioned by Shakespeare in Henry VI, part II. The inn was owned by Humphrey Collet in 1555, and it was still in the possession of his family when it burnt down in 1676. In 1720, Strype described the new building as "one of the best Inns in Southwark." The White Hart was immortalised by Dickens in The Pickwick Papers as the place in which Sam Weller is first introduced to the reader. It was demolished in 1888. Numbers 61 is a four-storey building with a shop on the ground floor; SMITHS PATENT, with many people looking in the window. Number 59 is a narrow three-storey building with a mansard roof, and the BORO CAFE on the ground floor. Number 57 to 43 are narrow three- and four-storey buildings with shops on the ground floor, and numerous pedestrians on the pavement.