St Saviour's Dock is a small dock on the south bank of the River Thames, London. It is located approximately 400 metres east of Tower Bridge and forms the eastern boundary of the picturesque and historic area of London known as Shad Thames. The other side of the Dock is Jacob's Island.
The Thames is highly tidal at this point and the intertidal range within the dock is substantial, with the water rising by as much 4 metres. During tidal surges the water level often rises alarmingly close to the windows of adjacent buildings on Shad Thames and Mill Street.
St Saviour's Dock is the point where the River Neckinger enters the Thames. The Neckinger is a subterranean river that rises in Southwark and flows north entirely underground.
A community of Cluniac monks resided at Bermondsey Abbey close to the site from 1082 onwards. The community began the development of the Bermondsey area, cultivating the land and embanking the riverside. They turned the adjacent tidal inlet at the mouth of the River Neckinger into a dock, and named it Saint Saviour's Dock after their abbey's patron.
John Stow, a 16th century English historian and antiquarian had the following to say about the area,
"In the south end whereof was sometime a priory or abbey of St. Saviour, called Bermond's Eye in Southwark, founded by Alwin Childe, a citizen of London, in the year 1081."
Charles Dickens set portions of his novel Oliver Twist in the area of Shad Thames, at a time when it was an area of notorious poverty known as Jacob's Island. In Oliver Twist, he set Bill Sikes's den at the east of Shad Thames in Oliver Twist, in the buildings adjacent to St Saviour's Dock. It is here that Sykes falls from a roof and dies in the mud, probably of St Saviour's Dock itself.
Dickens, gives us a vivid description of what this unsavoury place must have looked like at the time of the novel,
St Saviour's dock was also featured in the 2002 videogame The Getaway.