this post is not finished it has not been edited or checked
Post to to the east Hoxton
Agdon Street
Was called Woods Close. People used to wait for an escort
into the city here
Albemarle Way
Named for General Monk who brought Charles II to the throne. Late 17th street largely rebuilt in 19th
Skeletons uncovered here in 1989 suggest that a burial ground for the Priory was south of the church. Evidence of the priory's expansion beyond its walls was shown by excavations at the south end of St John's Lane.
2 refronted but behind the
later 19th facade are its 18th staircase and upstairs parlour. At the beginning of the 19th James Carr, architect of St James's
Church and later his son and successor Henry, lived here.
Amwell Street
part of the New River Estate 1820s laid out by Chadwell Mylne. Named after the Hertfordshire springs
which feed the New River. Near the
headquarters of the New River Co. Th west side of Claremont Square, Myddelton Terrace was part of a longer road, once the old-field path to Clerkenwell. Renamed Amwell Street.
Clerkenwell schools. Parochial, 1828 modest and cheap.
Designed by Chadwell Mylne and John Blyth. Built on New River land.
St.Peter and St.Paul, 1853, Commissioners' Roman Catholic by John
Blyth for the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion.
Fountain Pub. Dirty Dick - mirror gives pub another name
3 Bowman and Flood Ltd., non ferrous foundry
42 Lloyds
Dairy. 1914, tiled interior.
69
was previously in Myddelton Terrace. one of Cruickshank's homes. He
was Dickens' Illustrator.
Arlington Way
Arlington House, New River Co. flats
Ashby Street
Was previously Upper Ashby Street. remaining
properties of the Northampton Estate. named after Castle Ashby, the Earls'
Northamptonshire seat.
Attneave Street
Aylesbury Street
Marks the
boundary of the precinct of St. Johns. named from a post-Dissolution mansion, which belonged to the Earls of Aylesbury but was tenements by the early 18th.
Aylesbury House The monastic property was bestowed by James I on Ralph Freeman. It then passed
to William Cecil Earl of Exeter, and then to the Bruce family, Earls of Elgin until 1706. One
of them Earl of Aylesbury, adapted the Priory church as a family chapel. The mansion, was north of the
church. It was called"Aylesbury House", and stood in a courtyard with iron gates. In 1989 excavations revealed walls based on mediaeval foundations.
Site of Bull's Head, Britton's House
Premises of E.Pollard, shop fitter and
joiner. 1912-26
51 late 18th, has a genuine workshop window in the
middle floor
Back Hill
4 Presbytery and offices to St. Peters church 1865-6
Berry Place
Bakers Row
On 1690 map
Baker’s Yard.
Warehouses redeveloped by Kinson
Architects, 1989
Berry Street
Bowling Green Lane
in 1675 there were two
bowling greens shown on Ogilby and Morgan's map
16-17 four storeyed factory 1877 for William Notting, printer and type
founder.
Industrial dwellings, 1874
10 Board School. 1873
by Robson,
car park along Farringdon Road
Brewhouse Yard
16 BDP Studios
in old brewery buildings. 1728,
became Allied Breweries
Briset Street
named after the benefactor of
St John's Priory, but formerly Berkeley Street after the family
whose Tudor mansion was on the comer facing St
John's Lane. In the 19th this neighbourhood had crowded, narrow courts, populated by
the very poor.
16 A single
house with its original former shop-front at what was the entrance to
Berkeley Court.
Corner site with St John's Lane rebuilt as offices 1987 architects EPR Partnership
17 Rowley and Parkes clock maker
Britton Street
Formerly Red Lion Street, developed
in 1719 by Simon Michell, a local magistrate, on land belonging
to St John's. In 1937 renamed after John Britton (1771-1857), a local draughtsman and topographer. .
4 Reconstructed facade of Booth's
Gin Distillery. The early-20th-century front, with sculptured frieze, of Booth's Distillery, by E. W. Mountford. 1903 re-erected from its former site in Turnmill
Street in 1975 as a condition of the demolition of the original
building. Upper floors facsimile reconstruction,
with F. W. Pomeroy's attic frieze of panels showing gin-making processes. archway to a late 20th courtyard with council
flats and private offices, built by YRM, whose offices were in small yard at the back.
28,
30-32 clockmakers'
attic workshop windows
44, on the comer of Albion Place,
offices and flat designed 1987 by Piers Gough, of Campbell, Zogolovitch,
Wilkinson & Gough,
54 probably original, 18th Clockmakers’ attic
workshop windows
56 clockmakers' attic
workshop windows
59 Note cock-eyed window lintel caused by
subsidence. 18th
Janet Street Porter’s House. private house with top-floor
studio, by CZWG, 1987.
Jerusalem Tavern.
Where Britton worked - this is Britton of Britton and Brayley. 18th building but only a pub since
the 1990s
St John's Garden Burial Ground of St.
John's. Was previously Benjamin Street
Burial Ground. small park.
Brooke’s Market?
Open square and back of redeveloped Prudential building
Chadwell Street
Mount Zion Chapel
Providence Chapel
Angel Baptist Chapel. 1824. Contemporary with the New
River Estate. Calvanistic Methodists.
Developed as part of the New River Estate. 1820s. Named after the Hertfordshire springs
which feed the New River. Close to the
headquarters of the New River Company.
Developed from the 1820s.
Clerkenwell
‘Clerkenwell’ c.1150, ‘Clerkenewella’
c.1152, ‘Clerekenewelle’ 1242, ‘Clarkynwell’ 1551, that is 'well or spring of
the scholars or students', from Middle English ‘clerc’ and ‘welle’. In early Latin sources from c.1145 the well or
spring is referred to as ‘fons clericorum’. There is corroboration of the
etymology in William FitzStephen's account of London in 1174, in which he
describes scholars and youths gathering at this and two other wells on summer evenings.
Stedall Machine Tool Co., importing machine tools from the
Continent, 300-400 machines in stock for early delivery Churchill Co., last
century, importing US machine tools
growth area for colour printing, use of wood block
and copper plate, lithostone or zinc plate, involved in hand processes,
precision trades typical of Clerkenwell 1837
Finsbury. 1898 factories and workrooms with over 100
workers in clothing trades, millinery, mantles lingerie and neckwear, 1800
woodworking and ready made furniture, Electroplate and enamellers, 1950s, with
bulk of work sub-contracted to other London manufacturers GUS and GUM parcel
facilities here and Woolworth's
Clerkenwell Close
The close, originally part of St
Mary's Nunnery, was by the 16th and 17th
filled with houses with gardens. craft
industries changed the ownership of them. .cottages opposite the Horseshoe, known as 'weavers'
cottages' but actually watchmakers' or jewellers' accessories workshops, with
characteristic lighting on the top floor.
14-18 rebuilt in 19th style, not in
facsimile. Since the mid-1980s the Close
has had an effective face-lift. Tactful, bland mixture of 19th offices and
warehouses. Refurbished and
rebuilt in 1985-9
27-31 Clerkenwell
Workshops,
four- and five-storey warehouses
converted to small workshops in 1975, to challenge the
post-war policy of replacement Clerkenwell industry
by housing. range built in
1895-7 for the London School Board by the works
department, under T.J. Bailey, as the Board's central store 'Furniture', 'Stationery' and 'Needlework' appears over the entrances.
36-41 in 1987
plan of a large mediaeval building with chalk and ragstone walls found, with
an adjoining courtyard. The Observatory.
42-46, mediaeval floors and hearths, possibly part
of kitchens, excavated in 1986-7. Intended as replicas of demolished clockmakers cottages.
47-48 late 18th-century restored. The nunnery became Newcastle House replaced by these houses. Converted to flats in 1991 by
Hunt Thompson.
Newcastle House. Here lived William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle, a devoted
Royalist and his eccentric second wife Margaret
Lucas, the blue-stocking authoress. A descendant married George Monck, Duke of
Albemarle, who also lived here. occupied by
a cabinet-maker before being demolished in c 1793. On its site was built
Newcastle Place — since demolished — a row of houses by
James Carr, architect of St James's Church.
Cromwell House built by the rich
Challoner family of the City and later said to have been occupied by Oliver
Cromwell.
The Observatory. at the corner of Newcastle Row; offices with
a mirror glass 1987-8 by Peter Tiggs
Partnership. London Ecology Centre Exhibitions and
events concerned with the environment of the city.
Crown Tavern,
1815, collection of clocks in restaurant - a clock with connections with the Rye House Plot.
Horseshoe Pub. From 1833. From 1747,
supposed to be a tunnel to the prison for the hangman's drinks. 18th
house at the back. Contributes, with the windings of the narrow
street, to the Close's atmosphere. 19th pub built in front of an older
building.
Comoys Briar Pipe Manufacturers 1879-1937,
Peabody Buildings high blocks (1884).
St.James’ Church. Built 1788-92, by James Carr, a local architect and builder. on the site of the Nunnery choir.
In 1656 the parish bought the church and the avowdson and the old church
was demolished in 1788 - model of it in the vestry. church is a stock-brick box with a stone tower with an obelisk-like spire. Inside a curved end and a gallery, reached by two staircases. In the early 19th upper galleries added for charity
school children. restored by Blomfield in 1883-4, but many
Georgian furnishings remain. There is a mahogany organ case and an important organ of 1792 by George Pike England. Royal Arms in Coade stone over the
nave door, with an early 18th statue of St James. two charity boards, a bell ringers’ board about Westminster Youths, 1800 and a monument to
the victims of the Fenian riots, 1867.
Nunnery. At the
north west end of the entrance wall outside the church are remains of the old
nunnery. Benedictine Nunnery
of St.Mary founded in 1140 by Jordan Briset and dissolved in 1539. excavated in 1975.
St.Chads well 1822.
Churchyard managed by the Vestry of Clerkenwell
Clerkenwell Green
no 'green' has
flourished here for 300 years, though in 17th it was bordered with trees. Isaak
Walton lived here after retiring from his City linen-draper's business. In the
19th the Green became a centre for protest meetings. Here Dickens’ Oliver Twist
watched the Dodger.
Clerkenwell Sessions
House. The
Former Middlesex Sessions House which has been the London Masonic Centre since c. 1980. Built
1779-82 by Thomas Rogers, Surveyor to the County of Middlesex, and altered by
the County Surveyor, Frederick Pownall in
1859-60. Before 1613 the justices met at The Castle in St John
Street. Then Baptist Hicks built a hall for them, called Hicks Hall and this
used as was the Sessions House until 1779 when a row of old buildings on the west
side of Clerkenwell Green was removed and this building was erected at the County's expense. It has Hicks’ portrait taken from Hicks Hall. By 1860 this building was too small and it was enlarged. In 1919
the courts moved to Newington Causeway and the building became offices. acquired by a Masonic
foundation, and restored in 1979.
12—14 warehouses of 1878, by T.E.G. Charming.
15-17, reconstructed in 1986, facsimile shop fronts, 18th houses. 15 Longcluse clock dial
painter
18-19 Klamath House 1990 by Huckle,
Tweddle Partnership;
29
a former public house of c. 1860,
31 classical
building of 1911. Included in a development of 1984-6, designed to convey the small-scale 18th –19th variety that once existed here
37a Marx Memorial Library Built 1738 by James Steer as a Welsh Charity School. which moved to Gray's Inn. building became a
coffeehouse, shops, and a radical club. altered in the 19th but the front restored in 1969. In 1872, it became the headquarters of the London Patriotic Society, and the
socialist Twentieth Century Press from 1892 to 1922. Lenin had an office here
in 1902-3. In the library, is a 1930s mural, y Jack Hastings, pupil of Diego Rivera, depicting 'The Worker of the
Future upsetting the Economic Chaos of the Present'. Trotsky, used to pore over the radical books while Lenin edited the journal,
Iskra here.
Charitable infant school in the same house
Clerkenwell Parochial Sunday School
Clerkenwell Protestant Sunday School on site of earlier
school of 1801,
Excavations here in 1984
revealed a mediaeval tenement basement, which were within the precinct of St
Mary's Nunnery and probably rented out.
Telephone box
Working Men's Club
Clerkenwell Road
Built by the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1878 to link
New Oxford Street and London Docks. It was opened by Hogg, Chair of the
Metropolitan Board of Works. The Middle
level interceptor sewer passes beneath beneath it. part of it is ‘Passing Alley’
or ‘Pissing Alley’ on the Roque map. It incorporated Wilderness Row and some of Charterhouse Grounds. several narrow streets and alleys west of St
John Street were destroyed – like Liquorpond Street. Warehouses, offices and a
tram route were built along the new street.
102- 108 Columbia Gramophone Co.
29 Elson silversmith
57-18c facades of Booths Distillery, recalled from
Turnmill Street
60 Marshall silver repairs
74 William Phipps spoon silversmith
84 flat iron building on the corner
Cavendish Mansions 1882
Duke of York. classical pub elevation
Griffin Pub, site of Reid's Griffin Brewery. Reid's
bottle labels on the walls
Hat and Feathers pub. Alsopps mirror. 1860 by Hill & Paraire,
Holborn Union Offices, 1886. Board of Guardian’s
Offices. 1885-6 by H. Saxon Snell & Sons. Built in a short period when Finsbury and Holborn were jointly administered
for local government purposes
Holborn Town Hall. erected in
1878-9- for Holborn District Board of Works and sold in 1906
to pay for the new town hall and was demolished in the 1960s.
Penny Bank chamber with coin design on the walls.
Penny Bank Gallery. Converted for Association of Craftsmen 1879-80 by Henman & Harrison. model dwellings decorated with bands of tiles bearing the name of the National Penny Bank, founded 1875, and modelled on the Yorkshire
Penny Bank.
Plaque about bombing blocked by German airship
St Peter's. A mission church for the Italian community
living around Saffron Hill. Built in
1862-3 by John Miller Bryson. upper parts date from 1891 by F. W. Tasker built in brick and stone. interior
like an Italian basilica. Every year on the first Sunday
after July 16 there is an Italian sagra around the church with a
procession through the streets to mark the feast of Our Lady of Mount
Carmel.
Coldbath Fields
Was a path going to the river Fleet, name probably ironic,
Well in the fields
Coldbath Fields Prison, 1794-1887, built by Howard as a
experiment in strong discipline. Tristan treadmill
Apple Tree pub, 1720 on the same site in the 18th . Parcels run to the north went from 1887. Strong man of Islington Topham. Prisoners from Coldbath Fields there
Coldbath Square
Cold Bath cured nerve
disorders there from 1697-1870
Coldbath House
Compton Passage
Church School
Compton Street
Name relates to the Northampton Estate family ownership
Terrace remains
from Northampton Estate developments.
St Peter and St Paul R.C. School, remodelled 1968-71 by
Farrington, Dennys &-Fisher
Corporation Row
Was once called Cut Throat Lane. It marked London's most northerly built-up
limit. Its name derives not from the City but from a 'corporation' or union
workhouse, built in the fields about 1662 for a union of metropolitan parishes.
It stood at the NE corner of the present Hugh Myddelton School grounds.
NW corner bowling green
Clerkenwell Bridewell
Adjoining was a large bowling green,
from which the neighbouring lane was named.
Mulberry Garden, one of Clerkenwell's
many pleasure grounds, was opened in 1742, laid out in avenues and
gravel-walks, and providing entertainments - orchestra, refreshments,
skittles and fireworks. It was fashionable, but apparently not long-lived. Later,
during the Napoleonic Wars, its ground was used for exercising by the
Clerkenwell Volunteers.
The Quaker Workhouse. taken over about 1692 by the Society of Friends for
their own poor members and for a charity school. By 1774 part of the building
had become tenements. In 1786 it moved to land off the
present Rawsthorne Street, and the old building was
demolished in 1805, and the Paving Commissioners took part of the site for widening
Corporation Row
New Prison Wall.
A tablet on the inner side of the
north wall, between the two gates, commemorates the site of the explosion in
the wall of the prison.
in 1867 an attempt was made
to free Fenian prisoners Burke and Casey who were awaiting trial by blowing up the
north precinct wall. 15 people were killed and
forty or so seriously injured. Michael Barrett, the instigator, was hanged —
the last person in England to do so in public. The bomb
planted was between the gates marked ‘Infants’..
Crawford Passage
Before 1774 it was called Pickled Egg Walk
Cockpit
Cruikshank Street
Amwell House. Skinner, Bailey &
Lubetkin 1956-8
Bevin Court. 1952 On the site of the
bombed Holford Square of 1841 by Skinner Bailey & Lubetkin,
i.e. part of the Tecton firm after it had split up. Mural in the entrance by Peter Yates.
Holford House. Lubetkin, block of
maisonettes
Cyprus Street
Was King Street, 1880
The
Triangle maisonettes of the 1970s, by Clifford Culpin & Partners,
for the GLC, They replaced the Improved Industrial Dwellings
Company & Compton Dwellings of
1872-6
Dallington Street
Was Allen Street. Dallington was Master of Charterhouse
St.Paul's Buildings, Galactic House, Bailey Wood turners
Cavendish Buildings
Earlstoke Street
Now gone - it had been Upper Smith Street. named after the 9th Earl of Northampton's wife Maria,
daughter to a Wiltshire gentleman. renamed Earlstoke Street in 1935,
after Maria Smith's parental home,
Easton Street
Exmouth Market
1756, this was a rural path called Bridewell. The south side built in the 18th century as
Braynes Buildings. in 1818 the north side was also built up and
the street re-named in honour of Admiral Pellew, Lord Exmouth. It served as a main road connecting St John Street with
westerly districts. in
1892, application was made to allow a street market here as traffic was now diverted
to the new Rosebery Avenue.
Joseph Grimaldi, the clown, lived here, 1820s.
32-34. a
date-stone of 1765 with Brayes Building on the stuccoed front
43, first floor note curious 'rococo'
plaster swags in canopy form.
56 plaque to
Joseph Grimaldi. Which says ‘clown, lived here 1818-1828'. Grimaldi, lived here for the last
decade of a popular and well rewarded life.
City Mansions
Holy Redeemer. Site of chapel built on site of Ducking
Pond House for Huntingdon Methodist Connection in 1756. Demolished 1856 and
replaced by the Italian church. It easOn the site of Spa Fields Chapel demolished in 1886 when its lease expired. 1887-8 by J.D. Sedding, completed by H. Wibon, 1892-5. Prince
Consort's Organ from the Chapel Royal, Windsor, by Father Willis installed 1889.
Clergy house 1906
Church hall 1916, added by Wibon.
London Spa. , tile work inside. One of Clerkenwell's most famous resorts,
opened about 1730 in later Rosoman
Street. It was a re-discovered mediaeval well of chalybeate waters, Other small spas and gardens (such as the
New Wells), opening in the vicinity Entertainments included rope-dancers, fireworks, freaks, singers, operetta, and
home-brewed ale, In 1835 the London Spa was rebuilt as a tavern, and again
about a century later.
Eyre Street Hill
Gunmakers Arms
Farringdon Lane
The
continuation of the route out of
Clerkenwell. Formerly Ray Street.
City Pride pub. was the White Swan changed by Fullers
30 Abbott House. Plaque about being opened by John
Gerald??
16
Clerk’s Well of Hockley in the Hole. Site of old healing well – all sorts of fairs
and fun there. A kind of beer garden from Charles II's time. Butchers dog's
competitions at Clerks’ Wells. Set up by churchyard in 1800 ‘clerks well’ as in
‘Clerkenwell’. In Tudor times there was a stream flowing through the nunnery
grounds there. In 1673 it was turned into a well and given to the poor of the
Parish of Clerkenwell but it was in fact leased to a brewer called John Crosse
who enclosed it. Just putting a drinking fountain on an outside wall for the
public. 1720 'excellently clear, sweet and well tasted'. In 1800 a pump was set
up by what is now 16 Farringdon Street but the water started to fail and then
the vestry closed it down because it was polluted. The well chamber was filled
with builder's debris and built over. In 1924 16 Farringdon Street was rebuilt
and the well was found again. The Council leased the building and forgot about
it again. a
rectangular enclosure with some medieval ashlar wall; repaired with brick. It lay just outside the precinct wall of the
nunnery. Sacred wells used to run in the wall of the convent of
Saint Mary Tudor brickwork. 1170 miracle
plays
Peabody buildings 1884
Peabody Terrace 1964
34 Warehouse 1875 for John Greenwich, watch and clock manufacturer
Farringdon Road
This was built as an extension to Bagnigge Wells Road and
previously it was part of Field Lane and Chick Lane which was a very rough
area. The railway runs down the side and Farringdon Station and the goods yard
covered the valley side. Chick and Field Lanes
were demolished as were Coppice Row and Victoria Street. It was called ‘Farringdon’ for Mayor Farndone
who was a goldsmith. building on a grander scale than elsewhere in Clerkenwell and the
printing industry, because of nearby of Fleet Street was prominent.
14-16 plaque about Clerks' well
77-79 warehouse
with classical detail. 1880s
83-86 Associated Press
84-104 speculative
group of 1872 by Plumbe,
94,
Quality Chop House, an early 20t working-class restaurant,
much-refurbished 1980s but with some original fittings. .
103 premises
for J. &R.M.Wood printing press maker.
Machine Hall behind. . 1865 by John Butler
Flats
- on the
large site at the corner of Clerkenwell Road by Chassay Architects, 1993-4,
building up from four to seven storeys,
106 Penny Black. was tje Clerkenwell Tavern, 1888 Pub
109-111 for
William Dickens chromolithographer. 1864 First large premises of colour magazine
printing by
Henry Jarvis,
113-117
premises for V.& J.Figgis, typefounders.
1864. 1875-6 by Arding & Bond.
119-141
Guardian offices. Built as a warehouse
and converted to offices. On the site of Corporation
Dwellings built by Waterlow opposite Farringdon Road Buildings the
Metropolitan Association for Improving the Dwellings of the Working
Classes. Built as a warehouse c. 1976, and converted as
offices for the Guardian by Elsom Pack & Roberts.
143 site of grim Clerkenwell
workhouse?
Car
park vast
multi-storey of the 1980s
Catherine
Griff Court
housing of
the 1980s behind the car park,
Bakers' Row
Betsey Pub was
Betsey Trotwood and before that the Butchers Arms. in Pear Tree Court from
1686. Named after David Copperfield’s aunt.
Eagle where Lenin stayed. gone
Farringdon Market was on this area after the Fleet had been covered
over, before that Fleet Market was on the edge of the stream
Fleet Building, Telephone Exchange
Fleetway House HQ of Amalgamated Press, gone, IPC
Magazines
Gazzano cafe
Line of Fleet, Last section of Fleet was arched over in 1850s
from Peter Street to Castle Street
Middle Row. demolished 1867. structure in centre of
main road
Red Lion Tavern with plank bridge over the Fleet,
Site of mansion of John Oldcastle. Became a pub called Lord
Cobham and then Sir John Oldcastle, gone by 1762
Faulkner’s Alley?
Finsbury
Vinisbir 1231, Finesbury 1254, Fynesbury 1294, ry 1535,
that is 'manor of a man called Finn", from an Old Scandinavian personal
name and Middle English bury. The area was once part of the marshy ground,
later drained, north of the City wall
that gave name to Moorgate and Moorfields and on the mid-16th century
'wood-cut map' of London Fynnesburie Field is still shown as open ground with
horses, archers, and windmills. Finsbury Circus & Square were laid out as
part of a new residential suburb between 1777 and 1817.
Friend Street
1786-1825 Friend's school, 1702
Hermitage Buildings
Gard Street
Garnault Place
23 Grimaldi
Gee Street,
Called after John Gee
Gloucester Way
Goswell Road
Swallows
Saddlers’ Sport Centre for the City University. 1973. Sheppard Robson & Partners, begun 1973.
Mount Mills, Windmill mount
Pheasant and Firkin, was the Old Ivy House
132 Gordon's gin
Charles Green balloonist born there
77-81 Carter Paterson and Co. The premises back from the
road and approached by two gateways. Buildings consist of cart area
on ground floor, and stables and warehouse space on first floor, and stables
and smithy on 2nd floor.. The carts brought in goods collected in the City to the
Bank on the ground floor, they are trucked across to carts waiting to receive
them, which distribute them over London.
128 Carter Paterson and Co three floors used as Offices and open and covered yards with brick
buildings used for receiving goods, and storing them. stables, smithy, boiler and engine house and warehouse with grinding machine
and chaff cutting machine. The goods taken were principally parcels. a stable for young horses .
Great Sutton Street
Named after Thomas Sutton.
Narrow
lined with late c19 factories and
warehouses;
30a
was built
as a dairy by George Waymouth: dairy scenes
on ceramics
38 London Portable Gas Co. oil gas works. Cylinders
under patent of Gordon and Heard. 3.2.6. per 1000 cf. including collection and
delivery and ornamental stands for holders. Some internal piping installed.
Horsed vehicle delivery 7 miles from works. Royal Inst. Faraday discovered
benzene through it. Ok as long as coal gas expensive but then went. 1827
Charter maybe. 1819-1834
52 Dancer inventor of microphotography
Hall Street
Hayward's Place
Hardwick Street
Named after
a Governor of the New River Company. Called after local
ironmonger
Haywards Place
1834, terrace of six
cottages for distillery workers
1-18 was Suffolk Street and site of Woodbridge Chapel.
new warehouse for Croll meter factory in 1846.
Herbal Hill
Coach
and Horses the
comer of Warner Street, opposite huge
warehouses, 1900. It is on the site
of Hockley-in-the-Hole Bear Garden.
Hermit Street
Holford Road (not on az)
Hugh Myddleton Pub. After the New River's completion a tavern opened just opposite the Pond, named after Hugh Myddelton. The Myddelton's Head, depicted in Hogarth's
"Evening" as a wayside tavern, was frequented by performers from Sadler's Wells. It was rebuilt in 1831 and stood at the southwest corner of a new paved terrace, Myddelton Place, along the east
riverbank opposite Sadler's Wells.
Holsworthy Square
Six storey tenements for St.Pancras Housing Association by Peter Mishcon in
1981-7.
Inglebert Street
vista to St Mark's Church
Insurance Street
Jerusalem Passage
Site of Priory's north postern until 1780. It connects the north side of the square with
Aylesbury Street and with 12 Clerkenwell Green. Foundations of the mediaeval buildings in
cellars below the passage. by the old postern lived the 'musical small
coal man' Thomas Britton (d 1714),who became a
coal-dealer in Clerkenwell. gathered
celebrated musicians and members of the Court as an informal musical club, held above his shop. A tavern, the St John of Jerusalem, was on this site
until 1760, and succeeded by acharity school run by the parish
until the lease expired in 1830.
Laystall Street
Plaque about Mazzini. From 1836 onwards, Clerkenwell was the home of Mazzini, the
Italian revolutionary. Garibaldi visited in 1836
Christopher Hatton Centre, old London County Council
School, plaque .
Leo Yard
Was Red Lion Yard
Little Italy
Area bounded by Clerkenwell Road, Farringdon Road and
Rosebery Avenue – also known as Italian Hill.
Name goes back at least two hundred years.
Lloyd Baker Estate
The Lloyd Baker estate. three large fields were a long
parallelogram on the hillside between the Pentonville end of the New River estate
and the Fleet valley by Bagnigge Wells. owned by a Gloucestershire family. Dr William Lloyd,
Bishop of St Asaph, was one of the "Seven Bishops" who defied the
King. A plan of 1807
shows the three fields, two of them abutting on the east on New River
land. Hill Field had two small
reservoirs used by the New River Company; Robin Hood's Field adjoined Lord
Northampton's estate to the south, as Black Mary's Field. Black Mary's had a cow layer and other farm buildings. The Lloyd Baker estate was planned from 1818, placing. estate owners would not allow a connecting road between the estates and only a footpath from one comer of
Lloyd Square links them.
Lloyd Baker Street
The estate’s first houses were in Baker Street - later renamed Lloyd
Baker Street - in 1825. on slope towards the Fleet River
Union Tavern – previously the site of the Bull in the
Pound – a resort of vicious characters.
13 YWCA Converted in 1962 from- former convent, a House of Retreat for the Society of
the Sisters of Bethany first
established at No. 7 Lloyd Square in 1866.
Lloyd Square
Lloyd Square begun in 1833, it is a 'square' by
necessity, because space would not allow the converging streets to continue to
the top unless houses became almost back-to-back. Early residents of the estate were gentlemen,
tradesmen, and small professionals and a large number of Welsh inhabitants . It remained in private hands until very late. In 1971 Islington Council
acquired 95 properties on the estate and rehabilitated them with a GLC grant. Other houses were bought by tenants, or
occupied under licence. The gardens remained in private local ownership, maintained by the residents through a
committee levying a rate,
7 was the original Sisters of Bethany
Alexandra Club. In
1880-82 a House of Retreat was built for the Sisters of Bethany, the designs of
Ernest Newton; since 1966 this has been the Alexandra Club (YWCA). .
Archery Field
house. Just below the NW corner of the square was a small circular pond, one of
the New River Company reservoirs. This was drained and houses built on the
site. In 1883 these were replaced by a new Spa Field Chapel, for the congregation of the old Exmouth
Street 'Pantheon' chapel replaced by the Holy Redeemer Church. By 1938 this too was demolished and the estate repossessed the site.
Lloyd Street
Lloyds Row
Hugh Myddleton School. Separate Nursery School similarly
detailed to the main school.
Called after one of the Knights buried in the church
Malta Street
Named after Hospital of Knights of Malta
St.Mary of the Cross, picturesque fountain 1863. Glass
school and parsonage of 1870
Partridge Court, Retirement home
Manningford Close
Margery Street.
New Merlin's Cave
Spa Fields' had an association with
radical activity, and previously been
used for meetings. Built up piecemeal 1819-31 and then cleared and rebuilt in the
1930s. Some belonged to the
Northampton Estate, built up
piecemeal 1819-31 by a builder, John Wilson. 11
squalid
courts cleared
in the 1920s and replaced by Finsbury's most extensive inter-war housing. Five- and six-storey flats of 1930-4 by E.
C.P. Monson.
Mason's Place
Merlin Street
Merlin Street Baths
24 Charles Ronan House, flats for married police.
Milner Street
St Simon Zelotes
Moreland Street
King's Arms
Finsbury Mission
Moreland School 1971 similar to Moorfields.
Mount Pleasant
Clerkenwell
Hill circled by the Fleet River. Sarcastically called
Mount Pleasant. Site of Cold Bath Fields Prison.
Mount Pleasant itself was a heap of rubbish, which was sent to build
Moscow in 1812. Previously Called Gardeners Fields, . Before 1875 called
Baynes Row and Dorrington Street. Once just a country track leading to the
Fleet River.
Cold Bath Fields Prison built 1794 and closed 1900. It was originally the Middlesex House of
Correction with places for 1,800 convicts, the largest jail of its time. It was
a very rough institution, known as the Bastille or the Steel.
Post Office Underground railway stables, maintenance
depot, blind tunnel that was supposed to go up Cubitt Street and along the
Fleet Valley. Was to be an extension to King's Cross, and to office in
Mornington Crescent, never built
Post Office Sorting Office. By the Office of Works
converting the Middlesex House of Correction. Huge Parcel Post Office built in 1900-34 and damaged in 1943. Largest of
its kind in the world, with 91 acres of floor space, and about a million
parcels every week. Visitors were shown the Sorting Offices and the Post Office
Railway. 1934 by
A. Myers of the Office of Works. Vast.
Refurbishment and extensions Watkins Gray International, 1996.
4 Grimaldi
Holiday Inn
replacing Mount Pleasant Hotel, a refurbishment of a Rowton House.Myddleton Passage
Myddleton Square
This is the largest square in the
district barring Finsbury Square. In the New River estate. Design and layout were by the Company's
surveyor, William Chadwell Mylne (1781-1863). it covered the property of the Priory of St John, Commandry Mantells and "completely obliterated all
remembrance of the Mantells and their former lordly possessions.” Mantell said to be a corruption of 'Mandeville', the mediaeval proprietor who gave the land to the Priory. The Property of the Knights was
commonly known as a 'Commandery'. The exact site was a field called 'Butcher's Mantells', between New River Yard and the "Upper Pond". 1824 to 1829 the square appears as 'Chadwell Square'. By 1827, 67 houses were built.
3-4 disappeared during the Second World War, through enlarging access
to Myddelton Passage.
30 Plaque. to Rev Jabez Bunting (1779-1858), "second founder of Methodism.
42 Home to Edward Ballard – Medical Officer of Health and early
pollution inspector
43-53 Bomb damage during Second World War . Replaced in facsimile in 1947.
45
commemorative
plaque
5 home of
actor, Dibdin. Flat no 4 home of
novelist B.S.Johnson. The actor-playwright Thomas Dibdin,
60 Fenner Brockway, the first Labour peer, lived
at here 1908-10. plaque unveiled
(by himself) in 1975.
St Mark's Church. in the centre of the square. Built 1825-27 as a
chapel of ease for Clerkenwell and it is like a Commissioners' church . It is stock
brick but some of the stone came from
Wanstead House. designed by W. C. Mylne, Surveyor
of the New River Estate. Originally the church
had a three-sided gallery, but removed after war damage. Plaque recording the death of Sir Hugh Myddelton on 10 December, 1631 with the
words "Engineer, Goldsmith and Public Benefactor. He brought Fresh Water
to London".
Myddleton Street
Chadwell
Mylne laid out this suburb on the Company's land north of New River Head, with appropriate names.
Hugh Myddleton Junior School. 1966 for ILEA in a cleared area between Spa Fields
and Finsbury Estates.
Royal Mail Public House.
Mr. Turner, floor cloth and table cover, mfr, fire,
building, factory, japan and store room used as a drying house
New River Head
Sir Hugh Myddelton's New River was completed in 1613. Its
route from Amwell in Hertfordshire terminated with a reservoir on the high
ground above Clerkenwell, later known as Spa Fields. The former ponds are still
open spaces. The Upper Pond in Claremont Square is now a covered reservoir, and
the 17th inner and outer round ponds are now dry between Rosebery
Avenue and Amwell Street. Some early buildings remain. New River Head was
opened in 1613 by labourers walking round it. Pumps from old engine house of
1818 raised water to Claremont Square and Crouch Hill. In 1820 the company
offices based here but were rebuilt by the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1920.
Now all private housing.
The Round Pond formed the nucleus of reservoirs to which the
New River was channelled, completed in 1613. From the circular
"bason" or reservoir of 1613 water was conducted to a cistern thence to smaller cisterns, and finally distributed to
the City by wooden pipes
hollowed from elm-trunks. By the early 18th the Round Pond was ringed by a much larger, irregular pool, and they were known as the Inner and
Outer Ponds. The Round Pond was
abandoned in 1914 and vanished under Water Board buildings, and much of its
remaining original wall was destroyed in 1976 by the Thames Water Authority to
make way for prefabricated offices and car parks. . Part still remains
behind the main building on the north side
The
Water House. Sluice-house and offices. On the south side of
the Round Pond was the Water House 1613-14. brick buildings with a steep-pitched pyramidal roof and upper storey partly carried over a colonnade –attributed to Inigo Jones. Also with stopcocks for the sluices, a counting-house, and home for the clerk. Clerk, John Greene who
married Myddelton's granddaughter,
enlarged the building in the 1690s, when the Oak Room was created. it was home to Surveyors notably Robert Mylne (1733-1814), but was
demolished by the Metropolitan Water Board for the offices in
1920. In 1820,
the Company offices moved from Dorset Street here and Chadwell Mylne made the alterations. In 1902 the
Metropolitan Water Board took over the New
River Company's premises and in 1913
decided
to rebuild them - thus destorying the Water House and the Round Pond. Delayed by the Great War, new offices designed by
Austen Hall opened in 1920, covering the drained Inner Pond. It incorporated the
Oak Room. In 1987 the TWA moved to
Reading, and the building is now private flats. .
Wind pump. Circular brick base c. 1708, now with conical
roof for pumping water to the Upper Pond. It was replaced by a horse. Water was
pumped to
Claremont Square by a six-sailed windmill designed by George Sorocold. This proved unreliable, and two
horse-gins were substituted in 1720. The brick windmill tower remained a landmark for many years and its lowest
storey remains. .
There were two 19th boiler houses.
Engine House. In 1767 an atmospheric
steam engine was installed by John Smeaton, in a tall brick engine-house. It was not successful and
replaced. Two Boulton and Watt
beam engines were installed in 1808, and the engine-house enlarged–
with a tall chimney, which
remained until 1946.
Devil’s Conduit In
the area of the former inner pond and re-erected in 1927. It was originally an extension to the White Conduit, which supplied the
Greyfriars. 14th-century stone
cistern brought here in 1927 from
Queen's Square, Bloomsbury.
Buildings of the Metropolitan Water Board facing
Rosebery Avenue were converted to flats in 1997-8.
Headquarters Offices. by H. Austen Hall,
1914-20; with a formal entrance to Hardwick Street. the Oak Room of 1696-7, reinstalled from previous offices. plasterwork and carved panelling, The ceiling is oval with a painted medallion of William III within modelled wreath. The fireplace is flanked with two big Corinthian half-columns. watery and
fishy subjects flankthe royal arms on the over mantel are pobaly by Gibbons tradition.
Laboratory building by John Murray Easton of Easton & Robertson, 1938, built on a
curve, with continuous first-floor windows. blue ceiling
with figure of Aquarius by F. P. Morion, and original light fittings. Meter testing department extended in 1920s.
New laboratories on site of first filter beds.
Electric pumps put in 1950. Pipes which brought water from Stoke
Newington used to connect King George and William Girling reservoirs. Seal of the Metropolitan water Board bearing the same
motto as on the seal of the New River Company and two hands
on either side represent a boy pouring water and a girl holding a hose-pipe. The
eight drops of water represent the eight water companies which formed the
Metropolitan Water Board. Now flats.
Research Building. Howard
Robinson 1938.
Reservoirs built in 1709. 17th and 18th ponds. In the early 18th the round pond had another pond inside
it. 1976 moved for a car park.
Behind the main building is the old floor of the inner pond.
Surroundings
– in 1898 New River Head was surrounded by the Company’s
fields. the only buildings within a quarter-mile radius were Sadler's Wells and Myddelton's Head and Laycocks farm-house
Ring Main Shaft. The London water ring main passes under this site at about 45
metres underground. Construction site and access shaft.
Newcastle Row
Northampton Estate
Developed in
the early 19th on land around the Manor House
belonging to the Earl of Northampton, which
survived until 1869. Thus the names Compton and Spencer Streets. In the 19th specialist small-scale industries
and by the 20th the minor
streets were slummy
Northampton Road
previously part of Rosoman Street. Thomas Rosoman built the second
Sadler's Wells.
London, Metropolitan Archive, previously Greater London Record Office in the building since
1986. It was the former
printing works of the Temple Press, built 1939 by F.W.,Troupe and converted in
1984 to house the G.L.C. Archive and Library and remodelled by Bisset Adams.. 13 miles of books on London plus documents
and of photographs.
Northampton Buildings were On the
east side, bounded by Rosoman Street/Corporation Row/Goode Street, from 1892 to
1978 belonged to Artisans, Labourers and General Dwellings Co. Now playground
35 In 1813 the Finsbury Dispensary
was opposite the London Spa. It had the remnants of a 'grotto garden’, from 1780.
Thomas Wethered pub
English Grotto Gardens in north east corner of Lower
Rosoman Street
Mulberry Garden
35 Daily Chronicle start of News Chronicle
Northampton Tabernacle
35 Finsbury Distillery. garden there
Small reservoir.
At the
corner of the street opposite the London Spa, to
which it was at one time connected by water-wheels turned by waste water from the River Head.
Surprise
Northampton Square
Northampton Estate on land which belonged to the Earls of Northampton. Square laid out in 1805 on a cleared pipe- field
belonging to the New River Co. The square's plan incorporated six
radial streets, finished about 1815-18, all given Northampton family
names. before long
occupied by master tradesmen and others in the clock and watch-making industry,
and by the 1830s and '40s back premises were infilled by workshops. Northampton Square
continued 'respectable' until about 1900, but as leases
had begun to fall in buildings were split into
tenements. The whole area deteriorated into slum.
Compton instituted improvements. Including founding a new adult education institute in 1896.
Northampton House before 1802 was a private asylum. The mansion of the
Earls of Northampton before 1728 became a private
madhouse. run by Dr James Newton,
a herbalist, who laid out a botanic garden. In 1817 it became a young ladies' boarding academy, and in the 1850s,
"Manor House School,” for boys. demolished in 1869 for a church.
Northampton Polytechnic/City University. originally a branch of the City Polytechnic in
1907 it becane Northampton Polytechnic
Institute, and expanded steadily, especially in
engineering, technical trades and chemistry.
In 1957 it became a College of Advanced Technology, and in 1966 was
further upgraded as the City University.
The architect E L Mountford in 1896 made imaginative use of an odd asymmetrical site. It filled an awkward site with a public hall, offices and Olympic swimming pool. Bombed and some
replacements.
The
Centenary Building was converted from High Voltage Laboratory to lecture
theatres in 1993-4.
St.Peter’s church. dismissed by
Pevsner as "quite uncommonly ugly'. heavily damaged in the Second World War, and demolished in 1956.
Market. in the first half of the 18th a market for the sale of sheepskins was held in the area between
Northampton House and Percival Street, on The Skinners' Company land. From 1792 part
of the same site was used for the parish 'Greenyard', a pound for stray
animals. The Skin Market ceased about
1815..
The gardens. Lord Compton, had already opened all the square gardens to the public. 1886 he conveyed
Northampton and Wilmington Square gardens to the Vestry as a gift, the
Metropolitan Public Gardens Association having offered to run them for the
benefit of the poor. a fountain for local use was erected by Charles Clement
Walker, Esq., JP, of Shropshire.
11-12 George Baxter (1804-67), who
invented the "Baxter print,” a method of oil colour picture printing, and
had business premises here
18-21 eccentric numbering, Royal
Insurance plate
35 British Horological Institute
Owen’s Row
The line of
the New River. A short cul-de- sac terrace beside the
Empress of Russia pub, and by a small shrubbery.
2-5 humble Georgian terraces
Optics Dept of City University in 1963 buildings, which
were once part of Dame Alice Owen's Girls School.
Paget Street
Pardon Street
Was Clark Street. Site of Pardon churchyard and chapel,
dates from Black Death
Passing Alley
Features in films 'The
Criminal’
Pear Tree Court
A large area
of Peabody housing, built in 1883 to house over four hundred people displaced
by clearance of the overcrowded
small courts hidden behind the houses. A
surviving c1 8 house is just visible at the back. A haunt of Oliver Twist and
the Dodger.
Students halls of residence for City University
Large area of Peabody housing
Peartree Street
St.Paul's Church, bombed
Percival Street
Named after Spencer Percival
Brunswick
Close Estate swept the old pattern away.
1956-8 Embenon, Franck & Tardrew.
Three bold fourteen-storey slabs, rising from
leafy gardens, on a staggered plan to allow for maximum light levels. Exposed
reinforced concrete construction, with small projecting fire escape staircases
ornamenting the top four storey flats. The westernmost block has shops facing St
John Street, and originally had an open way through it, a Corbusian concept
which recurs in the firm's other Finsbury estates
Earnshaw House, Thomas Earnshaw, pioneer chronometer 1949
Grimthorpe House
Harold Laski House
Tompion House, Thomas Tompion watchmaking pioneer
Pickard Street
Kestrel House
Used to be Wood Street
Finsbury Health Centre, 1935-8 by Lubetkin and Tecton, their first public commission. One
of the key buildings to demonstrate the relevance of the Modem Movement to
progressive local authorities. This was the first achievement of the 'Finsbury
Plan', the borough's effort, inspired by Alderman Harold Riley and Dr Katial,
Chairman of the Public Health Committee, to create better living conditions for
its overcrowded residents. It has an
H-shaped plan, which is two-storeyed with a pan-basement floor, and a central
entrance set in a gently curving projecting wall of glass blocks, between
splayed wings. It has the Borough arms over the entrance. The formality is
tempered by a roof terrace to the centre, the name above in typical 1935-40
lettering. The walls are faced with cream tiles and there are glass panels and
metal windows. A floating effect is achieved in the 'flashgap' - a recessed
plinth between the walls and the ground, which is typical of Lubetkin. The
light and airy entrance hall is given character by its curved glass wall, and
originally had Gordon Cullen's health education murals on the rear walls, with
a large map of London in the centre but some original furniture and light
fittings remain. The lecture theatre has a curved back and a curved concrete
roof. Consulting and treatment rooms are divided by partitions in the wings,
where extra space and light fills the corridors. Repairs by Avanti Architects,
in 1994 restored part of the exterior to its original appearance. This included
asphalt reroofing, new tiles on the left-hand entrance wing, new thermolite
glass panels, and the restoration of the original colour scheme of blue and
terracotta to the painted concrete.
Finsbury Maternity and Child Welfare Centre
Rawstorne Street
Part of Frog Lane. The old road from London to
Highbury. The Land is part of the
Brewer’s Estate let to them by Dame Alice Owen in 1613. The Knights Hospitaller founded a hermitage in another
field on Goswell Fields - the triangle
between St John Street, Goswell Road and Rawsthorne Street. Here in 1610 were built almshouses for ten poor women
of Islington and Clerkenwell, a chapel,
and a school for poor children of the district, all by Dame Alice Owen, who had been enriched by the death of
three City husband, in 1613 she
conveyed the land in trust to the Brewers Company who
administered the charity.
Railway tunnel between Farringdon and King's Cross blown
up by bomb 10/40
Brewers Buildings. 1871. Some blocks refurbished 1968
48 St. Mark's National Schools
Amateur Theatre
Ray Street
Was Rag Street, supposed to be a mill site. Also it was Hockley in the Hole because it was
down by the river and because a lot of rough young people used to socialise
there.
Ray street crossover.
Tunnel below Metropolitan. Lines across widened lines. 1863 rebuilt 1960
widened lines 1860 to allow Metropolitan. Trains over old lines others go
under. Eastern end mouth is 16ft lower than Metropolitan tracks and dip under
the Metropolitan tracks and go onto the south side of the other lines.
Metropolitan tracks went across the widened lines by a wrought iron bridge,
which acted as a strut between the walls, which the cutting called Ray Street
gridiron, renewed in 1892, and 1960.
Tubinsiation of the Metropolitan Railway after 1860
between November 1860 and May 62. 29 ft wide 59 ft deep. Fleet River in a pipe
loft diameter. Tunnel is built on rubble in the river bed but after 1862
flooded to 10 ft. joined by the River of the Wells
Metropolitan Horse Trough
Paupers Burial Ground
was on the west side
Coach and Horses
– on the site of the establishment where all the fights and drinking took
place.
2
River Street
Chadwell
Mylne himself laid out this suburb on the Company's land north of New River Head, with appropriate names.
Features in films 'Doctor in the House’.
Rosebery Avenue
Named after Lord Rosebery, Chairman of the London County
Council who officially opened it
in 1896. it has
been originally planned by the Metropolitan Board of Works. The northern end
comes from existing streets but the southern end was new. In the 18th there were small roads north of the New River Head. In the Clerkenwell area new Victorian roads
were built over available open space, incorporating existing lanes, which were
widened. The road’s massive bridges and towering blocks obscure
the steep drop to the Fleet Valley and there are 14
arches over the Fleet River. It crosses Spa
Fields, past Sadler's Wells to St John Street in the
gap left by the New River between St John's Terrace and
Myddelton Place. most of the buildings opposite New River Head were demolished
including Eliza Place, the Sir Hugh Myddelton Tavern, and Deacon's Music Hall. At
the southern end printing and publishing offices opened , trees were planted,
and a new Town Hall and Fire Station were built, and there is even a tiny park
- Spa Green which was created from four separate plots. Among the demolitions was Cold Bath Fields
Prison and Mount Pleasant Post Office was begun and surrounded with working-class
flats. There was regeneration in the
1990s to designs by Peter Mishcon. Features in films 'Mona Lisa’.
1-2 Ginnan
133-159 sleek
and bold by
John Gill Associates, 1987-9, is
feebly postmodern, with brick triangular oriels with
a tall glazed frontage and
transparent curved stair-tower behind.
143 Kempson and Mauger enamellers
143-147 Edison
161
refurbished
1920s warehouse given a neat new steel fire escape to provide a focus at the back. All
by Troughton McAslan, 1989-91.
40 A brick
house, which is a remnant of Cobham Row.
In 18th the street went around the ‘cold bath’. A three-storey brick house. Cold bath commemorated in the name Coldbath Square.
44 Fire Station. L.C.C 1911. F. T. Cooper of
the LCC Fire Brigade Branch. Large, quite plain eighteen-window front, but with
nice Arts and Crafts details and railings
58-66, striped brick, with
two sets of hoist doors.
90 Rosebery Hall
Barnstaple Mansions
Bell
Bideford Mansions
Braunton Mansions
Cavendish Mansions. Grim looking blocks.
Finsbury Town Hall. An eclectically styled
building, on a triangular island site,
built as the Clerkenwell Vestry Hall in 1894 to replace the old parish
watch-house of 1814 and enlarged by the new Borough of Finsbury in 1899. Site
at a spot where six roads met, also opposite the London Spa but the first phase at the same time as the completion of Rosebery Avenue
which it fronts. Lord Rosebery was the
local authority chair who also opened the building. It is built mainly of red
brick with elaborate rubbed-brick and Ancaster-stone dressings. The architect
was Charles Evans Vaughan who won the competition held in 1893. The interior
was remodeled by E.C.P. Monson in 1928 but kept the original public hall on the
first floor which is most notable for elaborate Art Nouveau detail and the
winged female figures holding the electric light fittings... Outside is a
lantern and a fanciful glass and iron street canopy. The blunt-ended rear is
more Baroque; with a pediment with female figures; and carved frieze above the
first floor. The Council chamber was converted in 1975 to a mental health day
centre. There were further alterations in 1985.
Flats, tall mansion flats of
1892, with crow stepped gables and
decorative
Renaissance friezes. Less frugal in
appearance than Rosebery Square
although they were intended as
low-rental accommodation by their developer, James Hartnoll.
Garden
with War Memorial, 192l by Thomas Rudge, a
bronze angel of Victory on a tall granite pedestal
which bears a plaque showing 'Finsbury rifles attacking ‘Gaza'; two other plaques have disappeared.
Greenwood House
New River Walking up Rosebery Avenue, the pavement in
front of Sadler's Wells Theatre follows the former course of the New River. The
water ran here in an open channel until 1891 when Rosebery Avenue was
constructed and the channel was replaced with an iron pipe.
Rosebery Court. 1989.
By Kinson Architects, part of the Baker's Row site
prestige offices six storeys
with some fancy Mackintosh-inspired Arts and Crafts
detail.
Sadler's Wells Theatre. Is it the sacred well for
the Penton Hill? The fashion for combining medicinal waters with entertainment was
launched by the discovery in
1683 of two chalybeate springs in Thomas Sadler's garden near the New River Head. Sadler's Wells, and its rival the
Islington Spa on the other side of
the
River, opened at much the same time.
Sadler
already ran a music-house, and in 1765 this was rebuilt by Thomas Rosoman on more ambitious lines as a theatre: it
survived, with frequent alterations, until 1928. Public breakfasts and noon-tide
dancing were the rage, and 'exceptionable or improper characters' were rigidly excluded. It was Mr.Sadler’s wooden music house. The New River,
fringed by poplars, enhanced the area. New Tunbridge Wells or Islington Spa,
opposite the Wells, enjoyed its dizziest fashion in the 1730s when royally discovered it and the Court flocked
here daily. In 1765 a theatre replaced the Music House.
A
decline in fashion from the 1770s led to a dismantling of the Spa and despite its occasional revival, houses began to
encroach. At the theatre Debden’s spectacles used water
from the New River reservoir. The gardens, much curtailed reopened in 1826, but in
1840 the old coffee-room was finally demolished and
the ground completely built over. Grimaldi,
the famous clown, played between 1818-28. 18 were
killed in a struggle over the fire alarms. Samuel Phelps produced thirty-four of Shakespeare's plays in 1844-63 as
well as concerts
acrobatics and performing animals, aquatic spectacles — using an understage
tank filled from the New River reservoir - opera, melodrama and burlesque.
After Phelps it declined to inferior music hall and
then a shabby cinema. It was rebuilt in 1931 by Frank Marcham as a home of popular opera in north
London 1931 with Lilian Bayliss modelled on the Old Vic as 'a theatre for
the people'.
It quickly regained its place in Londoners' hearts and the ballet company achieved an international
reputation under Ninette de Valois. The theatre has since been the venue for
visiting companies. The spa-well survived until this century entered from a house bearing its name since preserved
in the theatre. The theatre was rebuilt as a major dance theatre through Lottery
funding. 1997-8 by RHWL. Exterior by Nicholas Hare Associates. The wedge-shaped
site is enclosed by tall, plain brick walls. At the end is a big glazed foyer
with giant video screen. Auditorium seating 1,500; special attention to
disabled access. A well survives beneath the present building. – Noel Coward
was the last person to drink from it.
Spa Green. A minute public garden made up of the
remnants of
the space left by the demolition of buildings for
Rosebery Avenue. The north end marks the approximate site of Islington Spa. One piece of this space came
from the New River Co. and was surplus land of theirs - Pipe Fields, used to
store pipes. Opened 1895, 3/4 acre. War
memorial 1921 with Victory on a pedestal.
Tall mansion flats 1832. Less frugal in
appearance than Rosebery Square
The Metropolitan Local Management Act
creating the Metropolitan Board of Works in the 1850s also conferred wider
powers on parish vestries. Civic
awareness brought into existence crusading newspapers such as the Clerkenwell
News (1855) and Islington Gazette (1856). The former, precursor of the Daily
Chronicle, started at 35 Rosoman Street in the one-time home of the Finsbury
Dispensary. With increasing circulation
it moved in 1862 down the road to Myddelton House, a new building on the corner
of Rosoman and Myddelton Streets and opposite the London Spa. When this was
demolished in 1972 an older building was revealed behind. Nothing now remains.
The paths intersecting the open fields belonging to the New River Company all
became built up as streets: Tysoe Street, Amwell Street, Garnault Place.
Viaducts –
hidden from view in Rosebery Avenue itself.
Pretty. Built 1890 by Westwood Baillie. Flies
over Warner Street cast iron on brick jack arches;
pierced trefoil balustrades
Rosebery Square?
Model dwellings, Hartnoll buildings now St.Pancras HA.
Rosoman Place
Features in films 'Alfie’.
Rosoman Street.
Thomas Rosoman was the builder of the
second Sadler's Wells. He also built a row of 'good houses' in 1756 along this
rural path, previously known as Bridewell Walk. Overlooking fields, it became a
favourite suburban retirement for prosperous City tradesmen. Spa-wells and
gardens proliferated here, but in the late 18th century the vogue for spas
declined, and the street was built over.
Not a single house survives of 18th-century Rosoman Street, which by the
1930s had deteriorated into slum tenements with shops below, and was demolished
wholesale.
Myddleton House corner of Rosomon and Myddleton Street
demolished 1972 Daily Chronicle
Rutland Place
Site of Rutland House Davenant
Sans Walk
The
old network of passages. Sans were a local family
Sheltered
housing Levin Bernstein,
1995-6),
Hugh Myddelton School became ILEA Kingsway Princeton College. named after the creator of the New River it
was opened in 1893 under the 1870 Education Act, which introduced compulsory
education and created School Boards financed from the rates. It opened as a
Board School in 1874, in Bowling Green Lane. It was the such school opened by
royalty, the Prince of Wales, with a key manufactured in Clerkenwell. it
accommodated 2000 children, and offered free meals. It thus became a show
school. now only the junior school operates, The school is on the site of the
Clerkenwell prisons, and is bounded by the prisons'-outer walls, and below the
ground are the cells of the House of Detention which were used as air-raid
shelters during World War II. It is a massive three
decker by T.J. Bailey's built on an
H-plan, with yellow terracotta decoration. The lower halls have vaulted aisles,
with classrooms off them. the top hall has a mansard roof on iron trusses.
There was a separate cookery and laundry building in an Annexe of 1902, built
as a Special Girls' School.
School Keeper's House, three storeys, brick and stucco;
formerly the prison governor's house. The boundary wall incorporates part of
the prison wall.
Clerkenwell Bridewell: In 1615 a 'House of Correction' for the
county was built on garden ground on the south part of the area of the school,
to ease the over- flowing London Bridewell. It thus became known as the
‘Clerkenwell’ or ‘New Bridewell’ or the 'New Prison'. One inmate was Richard
Baxter, the Nonconformist divine, who preached against the Act of Uniformity,
in 1669. By the late 17th century crime had so increased so much that this
prison inadequate. its conditions were increasingly bad and when the new House
of Correction was built in Coldbath Fields it became redundant and was
demolished in 1804.
Second New Prison was built as an overflow to Newgate, forming a
House of Detention for those awaiting trial. The most notorious inmate was Jack
Sheppard, who escaped from several London prisons including this. The prison
was enlarged in 1774-5 and a gate built facing Sans Walk, roughly on the site
of the present school gate. In 1818 it was almost rebuilt on more modern lines
covering the whole site including houses, and the former Quakers' Workhouse.
the high wall was then built at this time. It all cost £35,000.
House of Detention. In
1845—6 the New Prison was demolished and rebuilt on the lines of Pentonville,
by the County Surveyor William Moseley. It was a prison for both men and women.
By William Moseley, whose basement survives beneath. It
had prison cells radiating from a central hall with cast-iron columns. The
former female corridor is accessible; roofs of shallow brick arches; warders'
hall and clerk's office with granite columns.
Was Shorts Buildings
Scotswood Street
Was Newcastle Street.
Features in films 'About a Boy’
Sheltered housing
1995
Sebastian Street
Was previously Upper Charles Street. Northampton Square's original six intersecting
streets were mostly renamed in the rationalisation of London names in 1935. Upper Charles Street became Sebastian Street after
Lewis Sebastian, another Polytechnic Benefactor, one-time Master of the
Skinners' Company on whose adjoining land it stood and Chairman of the college
Governors until 1901. This has at least
survived, though many of its houses (1803-7) have been demolished. Pre-1814 it was Taylor’s Lane.
Sekforde Street
Sekforde Elizabethan from Woodbridge. This street, the most distinctive in the area,
was laid out across the Sekforde Estate on its rebuilding in the 1820s. The
fairly modest houses are distinguished by the terrace’s elegant curve, varied
doorways, and the copings with brick diglyphs, a rare feature in local
building. The high curving brick wall (1828) formed part of the perimeter of
Nicholson's Distillery. In Sekforde Street is the building where Charles Dickens had his bank
account. His books are alive with references to Islington - Fagin taught Oliver
Twist to pick pockets just off Farringdon Road
Myerson’s Ironworks with facade in the Greek style. Near the St john Street end of Sekforde Street:
unfortunately demolished in the 1970s.
8 John Groom of the Crippleage
25 and 26 a panel infilling in 1985/6
as flatted houses, although for some reason not in the idiom of the street, is
nonetheless a fair approximation to the domestic style of the New River estate.
Finsbury Savings Bank by a local architect. Was on
corner of Jerusalem Passage. Overwrought building – the splendid embossed
lettering holds the Savings Bank building together (1840)
forms an attractive eye-catcher from St john Street; designed by Alfred
Bartholomew (1801-45), who was mainly an architectural writer and journalist,
son of a Clerkenwell watchmaker. The Savings Bank originated in 1816 at the NE
corner of Jerusalem Passage. A festive stucco front in the spirit of Barry's Pall Mall Italian
Renaissance club.
Houses - Simple but nicely detailed three-storeyed terrace
houses in between some rebuilt in
facsimile by Pollard Thomas & Edwards after Islington had acquired the run-down estate in 1975.
Sekforde Arms
Wall of Nicholson’s Distillery 1820s terraced copy with brick Diglyphes
Seward Street
Before nineteenth century mound of earth called Mount
Mill. Chapel and windmill, battery and breastwork in civil war. Levelled to
make a Physick Garden on the north side. St.Luke’s burial ground. Managed by the Vestry of St.Luke’s
South side St.Bartholomew's burial ground
Leopard 1833
22 Henry Cox, 1853.
Seymour Close?
Skinner Street
Built on Skinners' Company land, which was leased, to the
New River Co. in order to store pipes. The Skinner Street Estate weas built
1968. Features in films 'Alfie’.
Skinners Well
Public library, Baroque Jacobean with an angle tower,
brick building in Contrast to the early nineteenth century houses, demolished
1967, first library in the UK to have open access shelves details,
41 Godwin
35-45 Houses an isolated c18 group,
straight-headed windows of rubbed brick, but much altered.
Charles Townsend House
Joseph Trotter Close
Michael Cliffe House
Patrick Coman House
Spa field Street
Was part of Yardley Street
Spa Fields
Public garden in open fields between Bowling Green Lane
and New River Head. Grounds of Ducking Pond House and the Pantheon Tea
Rooms. The Fields were approached
through an alley in 1895 at the back of cottages of Exmouth Street. 1816.
Became the core of an area for rebuilding by Finsbury Borough, interrupted by
the war. Fields, their hollows
filled with springs and ponds. Here unsophisticated summer amusements took
place, from rough-and-tumble fist-fights and cudgel-play to bull-baiting,
fairs, and 'frightful grin' contests between old men. Not surprisingly the
fields became a haunt of footpads, and link-boys were hired to light
theatre-goers from Sadler's Wells back to the streets of Bloomsbury. Spa Fields
were the scene of popular protest meetings during the depression and
unemployment following Waterloo. In December 1816 a peaceful crowd awaiting
'Orator' Henry Hunt was purposely stirred up by a group of agitators to attempt
an insurrection. Some marched to Clerkenwell and the City to raid gunsmiths'
shops, intending to assault the Tower, but were dispersed after a scuffle with
a hastily gathered force.
Playground opened 1936, by Chairman of the L.C.C. Fields managed by L.C.C.
Burying ground 1 3/4 acre and gravelled. Lay out by
consent of the freeholders. 1780 brick walls. 8,000 bodies in 50 years. Marquis
of Northampton drill ground for the Middlesex R.V. 1886 public garden ghoulish stories of the
place. In the 1780s land was
leased from the Northampton estate for a Nonconformist burial ground, and
within half a century had been so indiscriminately filled with graves that it
was estimated to contain 8000 bodies, nearly four times what it could decently
hold. Ghoulish disclosures were made of the repulsive details, for like Bunhill
Fields and most London churchyards it was still in use. Only after sensational
publications, powerful local agitation and a petition to Parliament were
burials stopped. In 1886 the two acres were convened to a public garden.
The Pantheon and Spa Fields Chapel.
Duck-hunting was pursued in Spa Fields at one of the local 'ducking-ponds'. In
1770 Thomas Rosoman removed a small tavern named Ducking Pond House and let the
land to the builder of the Pantheon, one of the last and least successful
places of its kind in the area. The fashion for which it sought to cater was
really past, and condemned for 'infamous company' it was closed in 1776. Soon
after, it became a chapel for the pious Lady Huntingdon's Methodist 'Connection'.
The extraordinary domed building, copied from the much grander Rotunda in
Oxford Street (and a long way after the Pantheon in Rome) was said to hold 3000
persons, having two huge circular galleries
Sadler's House part of Spa Green Estate
Site of Islington Spa.
Opened by Bevan on 26/7/1946, Finsbury Borough Council ambitious
rebuilding scheme. Lubetkin and Tecton with Ove Arup. Most innovative public
housing in England with many novelties –monolithic box structure, refuse
system, aerofile roof profile, etc.
Incomparable modernists. This is the finest of the estates successor
firm of Skinner and Lubetkin. The clearance area by the
1930s Plan,
an ambitious scheme for borough-wide rebuilding, which was halted by the war.
The original plan proposed a spine of eight-storey blocks ranged along
Rosebery Avenue, with lower housing complete with parks and amenities. First plans were made in 1937 by Tecton, then also busy with the
Finsbury Health Centre. Their revised and reduced scheme of 1946 for
the Estate was built in
1946-50. Three blocks of flats, n two of eight storeys, one of four. The lower one is on a curving plan, which does much to humanize the group and tie it
in with its surroundings. Executive architects were Lubetkin and Skinner,
the structural engineer, was Ove Arup. The flats were the most innovative public housing in England at the time,
with many novelties, both
structural -an early example of
monolithic box- frame construction of
in-situ concrete, the first Garchey refuse disposal
system in London - and social the ingenious aerofoil profile of the roof canopies on the tall blocks,
designed to channel wind through the
clothes-drying areas. The elevations too
depart from the monotony of
standard pre-war flats. The tall blocks, Wells House and Tunbridge House, are planned as a
pair, with their bedrooms facing
inward towards a landscaped area. The outer sides are deliberately livelier: plain
brick-clad vertical panels, containing the
living-room windows are divided by a syncopated rhythm
of inset balconies with grey ironwork against inner walls painted Indian red.
Fanciful curved canopies to the central porches and the curved ramps on the inner sides are typically
wayward Lubetkin touches. The four-storey Sadler House has a different version of rhythmic facade patterning, with
alternating balconies contained within a
tile-faced frame. Refurbishment in
1978-80 by Peter Bell & Partners included extensive retiling and
restoration of much of the original
colour scheme. Later decorative iron
grilles; lathe lift extension
to Sadler House was added in 1987
Greenwood House
Sadler House. Different version of rhythmic façade
patterning
Wells House. Planned as a pair with Tunbridge House.
Bedrooms facing in to a landscaped area
Tunbridge House.
Pair with Wells House
Tiverton Mansions
Spencer Street
Name relates to the
Northampton Estate family ownership
St James Close
Three Kings. near Lenin's office. 18th . site of hostelry of nunnery. Features in films 'Dance with a Stranger’ as
the Magdala.
St John Street
Ancient thoroughfare leading from Smithfield to Islington and the north. Built to replace Roman routeThe long climbing length of St John Street was
for long regarded as the first
part of
the Great North Road, a circumstance which dates from the days when the drovers came this way, bringing their cattle
to Smithfield to feed the population of the
great city. Road to St.John's priory. Used to transport
market garden produce. The New River crossed it. The ground level begins to descend to the 50-foot terrace level of the
City. Because of its heavy traffic, in the 19th century it contained 15 taverns
on the east side and 8 on the west. Until about the 1820s the built-up area
ceased at Percival Street, and beyond this was known as St.John Street Road.
1 Hicks Hall. Sir Baptist Hicks was a wealthy and
influential silk-mercer of Cheapside. He was knighted early in the seventeenth century,
subsequently made a baronet and finally a peer,
Viscount Campden. He was appointed Lord Mayor. In 1609
he bought the manor of Campden in Gloucestershire. He
died in
1629. Before the reign of James I Middlesex magistrates habitually
administered justice in a tavern-room near Smithfield. The growing inconvenience of this led to
their obtaining from the King land north of the market with licence for a
permanent building, leaving space for a carriageway on either side. Here Hicks at his own expense built a
Sessions House of brick with stone dressings, and this was opened in January
1612, named Hicks Hall in his honour. It
contained a room where bodies of criminals were publicly dissected. Famous trials here included that of the 29
regicides (1660) who had affirmed the death sentence on King Charles I. The Hall, dating from about 1610, was partly intended for the use of the justices
at Sessions and partly as a Bridewell, or house of
correction. It fell into ruin and By 1777 was much decayed and, rather than
rebuild so near Smithfield a new one was erected at Clerkenwell Green and the
old hall demolished in 1782 and replaced in 1780 by a
new Sessions House on Clerkenwell Green.
No trace of Hicks's Hall now
remains
although F E Baines states that ‘a wall tablet still
indicates in some detail the site'. It
stood just north of Smithfield Meat Market
at the point where St John's Lane branches from St
John Street. Its persistence a seemingly
undistinguished point in the City, as the place
from which measurements of the northern roads were made is at first surprising. The demolition of the Hall in 1780 made
little difference to its importance as a
reference point. This was the more infuriating to explorers who more often than not, failed to find the site of the former landmark;
in 1840 for example, a Barnet schoolmaster
Jedediah Jones, who was researching on milestones in the London area, gave up in despair his attempt to
pin-point the site of the Hall. Its
site was never built over, and remains open as the widest part of St John
Street. The traditional road to the north, whose starting point has long been
placed at Smithfield in the City of London, and
which leaves the Capital via Islington, climbing the North London heights at Highgate to Finchley. But the classic used by all the road books of the coaching age, was Hicks's Hall. Hicks's Hall. The most
important of the ten or so points in London from which
were measured the Great Roads of Britain.
1, plain apart from
some polychrome brick and a panel with the address.
3 Built as a
butcher’s shop and offices by W.Harris 1897.
More
flamboyant Tall Free Gothic gable
facing Smithfield, and a skyline embellished by quirky chimneys and
flourishes.
11 Stephen Bull
Restaurant, 1992 Morrison. Whose sentiments are at odds with the theatrical place making often embedded
in interior designers. As Bob Allies commented. 'We've avoided doing things if
driven by fashion.' All of which makes the restaurant the more remarkable. It
strives substantiality and to employ language of space, light and simplicity
plus some strong colouring demanded. Bull's demonstrates a consistent layered
and interpenetrating components and volumes affecting architectural detail. You
see it in the contrived volumes of entry passage, and suspended mezzanine; in
the strong patches of wall colouring; in the metalwork details of the security
gate (becoming an A+M trademark) and the slim flatness of the hand railing.
Minimalism is offered as considered refinement rather than a reductive
influence.
11-13, a site long empty, rebuilt
1987 as offices by Campbell, Zogolovitch, Wilkinson & Gough.
13-19 Meat store
18-20, a late c19 warehouse with hoist between two big Gothic
arches, and an oculus in the gable
above. Patrick Donovan Late
19th
22 is a tiny two-bay c18
house; redbrick with flush
windows; note the 2nd-floor window's unusual fluted architrave.
24
Italianate warehouse ingeniously opened up, with c19 Italianate front of three bays, was
ingeniously converted in 1986 by
D. Y. Davies Associates: the ground floor was partly
opened up, exposing the iron structural columns; a passage leads through to glazed showrooms in a bridge over the
yard behind
24a back
land warehouse.
26 Farriers
with ceramic horses. Stephen Bull
restaurant c19
30a dairy
built by George Waymouth. Dairy scenes on ceramic lozenges
34/36 Farmiloe.
Striking Victorian frontage. Lead and glass manufacturers. An Italian Renaissance 'palace' 1868 by
Isaacs, an especially striking Victorian frontage; eclectic Italianate with
busy stucco dressings. Four storeys,
with ornate cornice and decoration over the round- headed first-floor
windows. The plainer c19 buildings which
follow make an effective foil. The crescent shaped
block has a fine Victorian facade with offices and showrooms at the front and a
warehouse behind. Amongst other things the firm traded in lead glazing and the
manufacture of leaded cathedral lights. Inside, the warehouse has closely
spaced cast iron columns so as to bear the weight of lead once stored there. It
stands as a reminder of a once important London industry.
38-40 Vic Naylor.
Features in films 'Lock, Stock and Two
Smoking Barrels’,’The Mean Machine’.
40
-42,
brick, four storeys; brick
44-46 1877
stucco with
row of six arched first-floor windows.
57 White Bear 1899, one of the now few pubs, with a fine
brick frontage and stone dressings, in a florid 17th-century Dutch style. A highlight. Terracotta panels and curved
gable
69-73 good
group with a nice shop front. Late c1 with a good
early c19 Ionic pilastered shop front
71 Stephen
Bull's Bistro
72, an early c 19 survivor
with first- floor windows under
arches, suggest show much of the
street must have looked in the early 19th century
78 fine
Gothic warehouse 1886. Probably John
Lawson brass founders. Five storeys, with three storeys of loading bays contained within a
Gothic arch with traceried top
lights. Now offices,
80-88 suggests how much of the street must have
looked in the early 19th century.
80
good
first-floor ceiling, with a new entrance reached down a passage.
82-84, earlier c1
altered,
86-88 Café Lazeez. passage through to Hat and Mitre Court early 19th . Features in films ‘The Criminal’.
89 Gedge
& Co., 1885
90 is dated 1926; tall and narrow, with windows grouped in a
frame.
94-100 Stepney
Carrier Company Garage
99 elaborate free classical with curved gable, one of a group of narrow
frontages in the stretch leading up
to Clerkenwell Road. This was laid out
in 1870s; contemporary with
it are the SE and NE comer blocks,
with
moderate Italianate trimmings.
103 Bros.
Castings ltd. castings and precious metals.
115-121 Mallory
Buildings. Replaced slum properties
1906. Effete courts around the edge of St John's
Square, 1906.
122 Lee
clock maker early c19 with nice shop front.
Domestic survivals
137-157
stretches
from Percival Street to Sebastian Street a bold 3 storey composition in red
brick, which looks c 1910
145-157 tall
ungainly 1970s offices. Better balanced.
148-154 four-window
office range. In red brick and
terracotta
156 –162 Allied
House. HQ of Allied Brewers, the largest
in Europe. In 1970s including wines sprits etc. 1961 merger of Tetley Walker,
Ind Coope and Ansells also Harveys, Showerings of Babycham, Britvic, Coats,
Gaymers Whitways etc. and two Dutch companies - d'Organjeboom and Rude. 8
breweries in all in 1970s. Brewery
offices. With rusticated brick ground floor with an archway; splendid Rococo-inspired metalwork on the
timber gates. Terracotta panels
between the two upper floors. Behind, a
wedge- shaped counting house
and office, 1876, restrained classical, but with
whimsical Moorish doorcase. Vast
fermenting House and offices,
Tuscan-pilastered.
158-173 faience
faced simple classical 1920s offices for Pollards. Showroom and factory by Malcolm Mans.
181-185 some
of the sequence of Nicholson’s Distillery.
18th closed c. 1970, mostly of c. 1873-four storeys, grey brick with windows, cornice and segmental pediment one centre bay on a corner.
187-191 low
archway through to Hayward’s Place
201 Nicholson’s
Distillery Buildings 1828, austere and grand
236 industrial
building used by City University. 1860s
238 Building
which used to be the George and Dragon.
Tiles, George 'Finch Marylebone' in the outside stonework. 1889 rebuilt
1901
376 Barnes
enamellers
370, was formerly the
Clown Tavern,
Barclay’s Bank built as London Joint Back 1871. First more sober dated 1871, by Lewis Isaacs, a proud
stone- faced palazzo, four
storeys, elaborately detailed, with bowed comer oriel.
Bull Yard site of Richard Burbage theatre and pit. Corner of site of Nicholson’s was theatre.
Allen and Pepys, Used by the Queen's Men. Very vulgar audience. Survived the
Civil war and Cromwell. First to reopen in the restoration with 'Alls lost with
lust'
Cannon
Brewery on this site from mid c18; much rebuilt
in 1893 by Bradford & Sons, damaged in the Second World War and closed in the 1960s.
Charles Townsend House.
Called after member of Finsbury MB and Labour Party
Clumsy pastiche of George terrace 1980 replaces Myerson’s
Ironworks
Connaught Buildings, for City University with lecture
theatres, offices etc., in a converted industrial building.
Cross Keys with stone in the wall about Hicks Hall
Crown and Woolpack collection of jugs and cups became Japanese Canteen. A policeman hid in a cupboard to spy on one
of the meetings of Lenin and Trotsky Unfortunately he didn't understand Russian
Eagle Court
cleared for building in the 1980s boom,
Emberton Court
Empress of Russia. named after Catherine the Great.
Finsbury
Estate 20th. The last of
Finsbury's
major rebuilding schemes, completed only in 1968, after
the borough had become part of Islington.
By C. L. Franck of Franck & Decks,
successor to Emberton, Franck & Tardrew.
Four housing blocks, freely grouped to the realigned sweep of Skinner
Street; two blocks of four storeys, one of
nine and one of twenty-five. The taller
blocks have reinforced Concrete frames, and
are in shades of grey, with blue spandrel panels
to the tallest. The different buildings
interlock to a greater extent than in the
firm's earlier work, a characteristic of the three- dimensional planning current in the 1960s. A covered car park is included, and also a Library crisply black and white,
with a -two-storey glazed
front respecting the line of St John Street.
There is a vista through the
ground floor of the tower block beside it,
but the bulk of the car park compromises the view.
Flats Tall
LCC flats over shops, five
storeys and attics in austere grey and yellow
Gilbert & Rivington printers
Goose Yard
Gun Alley
Hicks Hall demolished in 1780 but little difference to its
use as a datum point, often not clear where it was. Baptist Hicks was a silk mercer, 17th
century, a knight, from Campden, A great man and lord mayor. Replaced by new
sessions house. Plaque on a wall about it. Where St John's Lane branches to St
John Street. Great North Road where distances of the mail coaches were measured
from. First bit of Great North Road. Used particularly by the cattle
drovers. Where distances of the mail
coaches were measured from. Family
house, 1868, Powler
Institute eclectic baroque, 1894-6. Exceedingly successful example of the
neo-French 16th century of the moment with an appreciation of a playful
enrichments
Library - Finsbury Reference Library. Local history section. 1965 part of the
surrounding estate. Intended as central library for Finsbury. By C. L. Franck, 1965-8. The two-storey
curving front respects the line of the street, emerging from beneath a tower
block. Precast units in black and white, with large glaze entrance to a broad
foyer; a public hall, children’s library and the main library behind, the
latter given character by generous window and suspended barrel ceiling.
Replacing the library in Skinner Street of 1890 by Karslake Mortimer.
Mulberry Court
Northampton
Institute.
Peel Meeting House
Scholl's head office
St John of Jerusalem. On site of old Cannon Brewery. Part
of Ind Coope Head Office. Name from the order of St John. Brewery building is a
landmark.
St.John's Mews
Tunbridge House part of Spa Green Estate
St.Helena Street
Part of the Wilmington Square area -
Cromwell criticised the builders of this "handsome assemblage of
edifices" for allowing it to be "nearly environed with streets of a
most mean and narrow character", especially an alley between 35 and 41 feet to the north,
"between the rear-yards of one line of houses and the little front gardens
of another ... a waste of the intermediate ground which so alarmed its
proprietor, that he has since (1826) erected another row of houses ... between
the former ones" - probably St
Helena Street. In time parts of Clerkenwell, with alleys and
mean infillings, became one of the worst Victorian slums, especially St Helena Street, whose houses
were actually back-to-back, was among the most notorious.
St.James Walk
Was previously called Hart Alley and when it was partly built up post Restoration it was known
for obvious reasons as New Prison Walk. It was renamed in 1774 and called New Walk. Most of
the houses are from that date and part of the Sekforde estate housing developed
in 1827. The leases granted then led to extensive
rebuilding. Features in films 'About a
Boy’.,
Clerkenwell Parochial Sunday School 1828 built on the site
of an earlier one of 1809, and a charitable infant school opened in the same
house (1831). The architect was William
Lovell, a Pentonville surveyor, and in 1858 the house was raised by one storey
by William Pettit Griffith. Griffith's
father John Griffith lived in St John's Square.
This was the main approach from the
City to the Priory of St John of Jerusalem, across the open plain of Smithfield
('smooth field').
36 High on the wall near the south
end of the street, is a cross, believed to indicate that the site was once
property of the Order of St John. There is also a parish boundary plate dated
1797.
28 near the Gate, next to Passing
Alley a stone inscription reads: 'this building was partly destroyed by German
aircraft on the 18th December 1917. Restoration completed 1919'.
The Baptist's Head: A tavern owing
its name to the mediaeval priory formerly stood on the east side of the lane,
opposite the north side of Albion Place. Here chained prisoners in convoy from
the Sessions House to Newgate Gaol were allowed to halt and drink a stoup of
ale. When the inn was demolished in the 1890s a fine late Elizabethan fireplace
was removed to St John's Gate
St John's Gate – On of the most
distinguished buildings, and almost the only one to survive until our times,
was Prior Thomas Docwra's handsome gatehouse of 1504, opening towards the City,
still very much in the Gothic style and resembling a college gateway. It was the main gate
to the Priory of St.John. Built by Prior
Thomas Docwra in 1504. For the
Order of the Hospital of St John of Jerusalem, better known as the Knights
Hospitallers, an order of chivalry founded late in 11th century at Jerusalem.
Its headquarters were later moved to the island of Rhodes and then to Malta
(1530-1798). The priory, built about
1148, soon after the establishment of the order, was burned down by Wat Tyier's
rebels (1381). Site went to Henry VIII at Reformation,
used as a storehouse and blown up by Duke of Somerset. Stone used for his
palace in the Strand, Mary I restored the church. Under Elizabeth used for play
rehearsals. Buildings given to the Duke of Northumberland, some kept by the Crown
as a store. Became a chapel for William Cecil, various other owners. Hogarth's
father's coffee shop in the gateway. Johnson lived there. Became a watch house
and the Old Jerusalem Tavern, council office of the masons. 1845 dangerous
structure restored, 1877 1931 back to the Order of St. John, by then Protestant
- Most Venerable Order of the Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem. St John's
Ambulance launched 1958. The room
over the gate was once occupied by Edward Cave, the founder 1731 of the
Gentleman's Magazine, to which Johnson and Garrick subscribed. It continues to
be known as the Council Chamber, and contains 15th-century altar-paintings
looted from the priory church at the Dissolution and rediscovered in 1915, and
interesting relics of the Knights Hospitallers. The annexe on the south-east of
the gateway was added in 1903 by J. Oldrid Scott. On the north side of the
gatehouse are the arms of the order and Prior Docwra restored.
. The main entrance to the former
Priory was built in 1504 by Sir Thomas Docwra, last Prior but one before the
Dissolution. Under Queen Elizabeth I the Priory buildings were used as the
office of the Master of the Revels, and later the Gate was for many years the
home of the Gentleman's Magazine, whose editor Edward Cave was visited here by
Dr Johnson, Goldsmith, Garrick and many others. It subsequently became a
watch-house, a tavern and the offices of a Masonic order. In the 1840s the
stonework had become so eroded that demolition was threatened, but it was saved
and restored by a local architect, William Pettit Griffith. In 1874 the Gate
was re-acquired by the modern Order of St John to become their headquarters.
The Perpendicular-style addition on the south side, designed in 1903 by John
Oldrid Scott, contains the Order's Chapter Hall, offices. Gatehouse to the inner precinct, built 1504 by Prior Thomas Docwra,
had a chequered career after the Dissolution; in the c18 it was offices and
printing works for the Gentleman's Magazine, in the c19 the Old Jerusalem
Tavern. 1874 it became Headquarters and Museum of the revived Mo Venerable
Order of St John. Restored in 1846 by W.P. Griffith, 1873-4 by R. Norman Shaw,
and then from 1885-6 by. Scot who was
involved in a ten-year programme of restoration, adaptation and building,
including new offices to the SE (1901-3), and new Chapter House (1901-4). The
gatehouse has an archway with room above, flanked by four-storey blocks. These
have main room on each floor with garderobe projection and square stair-turret.
The dressings are of Kentish rag, much restored, with inner walls of brick;
those within the archway have some brick diapering. Archway with star-shaped
tierceron vault main window above of three lights, battlements of 1846 with
additions of 1892-3. Stair-turrets with small Perpendicular doorways, reset to
allow for the raised ground level. Scott additions 1901-3 are in matching
Perpendicular, with a broad doorway planned for ambulances. The interiors are
largely in Scott's Neo-Tudor, with plenty of panelling. His Chapter Hall has
big Perpendicular fireplace windows with heraldic glass, and a grand timber
ceiling with central lantern rising above supported by well-carved stone angel
corbels. On the same level is the Council Chamber in the room above the
archway. This has a fireplace of c. 1700, panelling 1900, and more heraldic
glass 1911 by Powells. Roof with lantern of 1885-6 inserted above early ci6
trusses with coarse openwork panelling. In the wing a late c17 closed-string
staircase with bulbous balusters; pretty plaster motifs on the soffit, added in
the l860s. On the second floor a fine late c16 stone fireplace, from nearby
Baptist's Head, formerly the town house of Sir Thomas Forster. Tapering
pilasters, lintel carved with fruit, deer and other animals. The wing
stair-turret has its original timber newel stair. It leads to Shaw's library,
with big Tudor fireplace dated 1874.
Dundee Buildings
Eagle Court Board School 1874
St.John’s Lane
Board School 1874, extended 1894. Plain, two L shaped
blocks, tall chimneys and gables.
St John's Square was in origin no more a
true 'square' than was Charterhouse and both grew up on the site of monastic
foundations. The Priory founded in the 12th century, as English headquarters of the Knights of
St John or Knights Hospitaller, eventually comprised a massive church, a great
hall and Prior's lodging, and several smaller buildings. Its main entrance was on the south, a towered
gatehouse opening on the area north of Smithfield. In spite of the empty courtyard implied by
Hollar's etching of 1661, the Priory enclosure now outlined by St John's Square
must from early days have contained tee-standing and lean-to buildings, as well
as gardens and plots. The Great Hall,
more than 100 feet long, with a grand staircase, stood at the enclosure's North
-East angle immediately south of it the church, in its entirety, must have
extended well across the court n, and a good way down. At the Priory lived two Priors, one of the
English Langue of the Order, the other of Clerkenwell who ran the church; also
the Preceptor or administrator. There
were a number of knights; some resident, others visiting the city on Order
business, or Bounding the Court besides three Chaplains and 15 other clergy. Royalty and nobility took up the right to
hospitality. Other residents were the
Keeper of the Keys, and certain guests, who were entertained at the Prior's
table. Humbler but vital members of the
permanent community included the cook and servants, dispensary workers, a
janitor, a laundress -one of the few women - attorney and his clerks, and the
Procurator-general's staff. Outdoors
were a brewer, millers, a pig-keeper, and slaughterer. It was a populous and busy establishment. Important Royal or state visits were made to
the Priory, when its courtyard was hidden by monarchs and high prelates. One such occasion was in 1185, in the reign
of Henry II, when the Order's Grand Master Roger des Moulins, and the Patriarch
of Jerusalem, were there during this visit the Patriarch himself consecrated
the Priory's new church with its circular nave.
Not many years later, in 1212, King John was the Prior's Lenten guest,
and on Easter Sunday he knighted Prince Alexander of Scotland, son of King
William the Lion - who later became King Alexander II. Of the buildings round the courtyard, most
had been destroyed in the Peasants' Revolt of 1381, when the then Lord Prior,
Sir Robert Hale, was the particular object of revenge by Jack Straw and his
followers. He was beheaded by the mob at
the Tower of London, and the great Priory Church and other buildings
burnt. During the next century and a
half, however, the Priory was substantially restored and beautified, and he
original circular church replaced by a new one with a rectangular nave. Indeed »y 1540 the Priory was at a pinnacle
of wealth, splendour and power, and besides the handsome church the courtyard
contained the Grand Prior's and Sub-Prior's edgings, dormers for priests and
yeomen, and an armoury, distillery, counting-house, slaughter-house, laundry
and other offices, and a schoolhouse.
Dotted about were a wood yard, orchard, and gardens with a fishpond, and
a burial ground. Some locations can only
be matter for conjecture. Once the
predators moved in much of the priory was dismantled. By the 1550s King Henry's successor Protector
Somerset had ordered the church nave to be removed and the stones used for his
own new palace in the Strand, Somerset House.
Chancel and crypt, however, survived, serving in turn as chapel, library
and wine-cellar, until in 1723 they were restored by a merchant named Simon
Michell for use as a parish church for the new parish of St John,
Clerkenwell. The new church was the
occasion of great opposition from the old, St James's, so that St John's never
became completely independent and did not control its own rates. Michell, a JP, was in fact very unpopular,
and on his death his coffin was stoned.
Monastic properties after their dissolution were usually shared between
rapacious couriers, who often built themselves fine mansions on the site, and
this was the immediate fate of the rest of St John's Priory. Queen Elizabeth I's Master of the Revels was
soon housed in the main buildings, as was, under Queens Mary and Elizabeth, Sir
William Cordell, Master of the Rolls. In
the reign of Charles I came-Lord Burleigh, and several knights and widowed
ladies, such as Sir Francis Lovel Sir Thomas Pelham, and Lady Sekforde. Later was Sir William Fenwicke, a
Parliamentarian and member of the Long Parliament. Noble inhabitants in Charles II's reign included
Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Carlisle, one time Ambassador to Muscovy and
Scandinavia; Arthur Capel, Earl of Essex, whose distinguished political career
ended with his implication in the Rye House Plot and Horatio, 1st Baron
Townshend. The fashionable world,
however, was moving westwards to the restored Court at Whitehall, and the
square's population, although still well-to-do, became more broad based. Well into the 18th century it continued an
expensive area to live. Only after the
turn of the century, with the sharp rise in population, was its status among
the well off threatened by the creation of more modern residential areas such
as the New River Estate.
20A large house on the inner, SE corner of the
passage, shown in Storer's 1828 engraving of St John's Church, was occupied in
1816 by the Finsbury Savings Bank (then no.), until its removal in 1840 to the building in
Sekforde street which still bears its name.
21-24 the distinctive character of the Square and
surroundings had now long been industrial, ranging from watch- and clockmakers
and ancillary craftsmen to printers, engravers and paper firms. Later came platers, gilders, and other
non-ferrous metal workers, and Smiths themselves were to transfer to the latter
capacity, moving from the clock making corner to the opposite range:
(nos.21-24, now 49-52).
27
with a
front of 1876 by R. Norman Shaw for Sir Edward Lechmere. Red brick, five storeys, with two levels of
dormers. Linked to the priory by an
addition of 1903.
33-38 Clerkenwell Green Association Workshops
36-44 Bishop Burnet's House 36 and later 44, was the house of the famous
Bishop Gilbert Burnet (1643-1715): a rambling two-storeyed, three-gabled
mansion "lighted
in front by 14 square-headed windows", its forecourt planted with trees
and shrubs, and with large gardens behind.
Steps led up to a large entrance portal with a carved entablature borne
on Tuscan columns. Inside, the rooms had
handsome chimneypieces carved in relief, one containing a grate with a
bas-relief dated 1644, of Charles I riding over "the Spirit of
Faction" - a prostrate female - surrounded by pillars, bay wreaths,
scrolls and a crown. Two lead cisterns
belonging to the house, dated 1682 and 1721, survived at least until the 1860s. Burnet, a prolific author, notably of the
History of the Reformation in England (1679-1714), and a History of his Own
Time (1724-1734), was in 1689 appointed by William III to the Bishopric of
Salisbury, but after active participation in politico- religious factions he
retired to a quiet life in Clerkenwell, though his continued friendship with
great men such as the Dukes of Marlborough and Newcastle the latter a
Clerkenwell neighbour, drew many listeners to his Sunday evening lectures here. The most notable event of Burner's occupancy
was during the Sacheverell riots of 1710, when the Bishop witnessed the mob
pretending support for Tories and High Church in their destruction of the
contents of the former Priory church, because e t was then used as a Dissenting
chapel. Burnet died at his house, almost
pen in hand, on 17 March 1715, and at his burial at the church of St James's,
the ill-disposed mob threw din and stones at his hearse. Late in the 18th century Burnet's house was
occupied by Dr Joseph Towers (1737-99), a humble Southwark bookseller's son who
became a printer, bookseller, dissenting minister, and honorary Edinburgh LLD
(1789). He was a prolific writer of
tracts, compiled a British Biography, and contributed to Biographica
Britannica. Towers, who preached at
Newington Green Chapel, was arrested in 1789 as a free-thinker, but his;
powerful connections secured his release without trial, and he died in St
John's Square possessed of many honourable friends. Burnet. The square's 18th-century prosperity was undermined
when City merchants built new houses farther north, in rural surroundings
within sight of the villages of Hampstead and Highgate, and the old mansions became
multi-occupied tenements. Many Tudor or
Jacobean houses survived, in decay, until early or even mid-Victorian
times. Already in 1817 the Gentleman's
Magazine had illustrated Burner's former house as divided into two such
tenements, with the addition of first-floor bay windows; and a double row of
small lodgings had been built in the one-time back garden approached through an
arched passage known as Ledbury Place beside the former mansion's front
door. The south half of the house was
occupied by the parish clerk and undertaker, the north by a "Hearth Rug
manufactory.” By 1859, when Pinks was
writing, the large, high rooms had themselves been partitioned to form 23 mean
dwellings for families and small manufacturers - shoemakers, box-makers, frame-
makers, stay-makers - and the original staircases had been replaced. The back gardens filled with the poor
cottages, and even the forecourt by small shops.
36A has a defaced date plaque of 1850
giving the builder's name, James Brown
45 adjoining Burnet's was a similar mansion
belonging to John and Theodore Clarke, printers, sons of the Rev Adam Clarke, who was Professor of
Greek at Cambridge and Fellow of Trinity College. He was born in Londonderry of English
parents, and worked closely with John Wesley, by whom he was ordained in 1782. While visiting London he used to lodge with
his sons here if Clerkenwell. He died at
Bayswater in the first cholera outbreak, but was buried of the grounds of the
City Road Methodist Chapel, near to John Wesley
47, early c18 refaced in the c19, stand on late c16 brick vaulted
cellars with a four-centred arch,
probably remains of post-Dissolution buildings constructed
within earlier outer walls which may have belonged to the priory bell tower demolished in 1550.
47-52, a row of late 18th-century houses on the
north side, gutted in 1987 for reconstruction as offices for Smith & Co.
behind the facade, except in the cellars, where excavation revealed remains of
limestone walls of St John's Priory.
48-52
Most houses built in the square in
the 16th-18th centuries incorporated rubble from the Priory foundations, if not
actual walls. In 1845 the architect W P
Griffith, an inhabitant of the Square who was commissioned to restore the then
crumbling St John's Gate, recorded 7-foot walls with splayed window openings
under the North range - possibly the base of the 300-foot-high church tower, as
described by the historian Stow. Cellars
and basements of houses in this range coincided with foundations of the tower,
of ashlar and chalk rubble core.
Excavations below the same buildings in 1986 (the present nos.) revealed
well-preserved courses of limestone walls and fairly regular chalk blocks, and
a doorway probably dating from approximately the beginning of the 13th
century. At the rear were well-preserved
quoins within an original door, and windows, which may have included one that
Griffith had found. In 1862 Griffith
noted that the arch of the new East-West main London sewer, which passed under
the south of the square, had been partly built with stone from the Priory. A typically utilitarian Victorian ^Approach
to the then considerable surviving mediaeval relics.
49-50 Gregory was presumably the builder in 1781
(formerly nos.21-24) the NW corner - today the square's oldest surviving
secular buildings. Only facades remain
49-52 from the Gate and the main body of the church,
the oldest relic was until 1986 the row of houses 49-52 occupied by Smiths,
49-50 late 18th century and 51-52, early 19th. In
1986-8 these were gutted, leaving only the facade behind which the interiors
have been reconstructed for offices, although in fact nothing original remained
above ground level. Excavations by the
Greater London Archaeology Unit, as pan of a general historical research into
the Priory's history, revealed a fair amount of the mediaeval structure among
the foundations. Smiths' original
factory premises in the NE corner, on the site of Aylesbury House, were also
gutted in 1989, when extensive archaeological excavations were made
51-52 was the home of the Finsbury Dispensary,
founded in 1780 to relieve sickness among "the labouring and necessitous
poor.” In 1805 they removed to St John
Street, and thence elsewhere before settling in Hayward's Place. The St John's Square lease had run out, and rather
than restore dilapidations, the owners rebuilt (1806). This was the building used by Doves the
printers as their offices. Other
printers also established themselves in this row, and later John Smith and Sons
removed to the whole range. The distinction
in date is visible in the facades, which are all that remain only facades remain 1806-7.
Behind, all was rebuilt c. 1990.
52 was from 1757 for many years the printing works
of Gilbert and Rivington, printers to the even older firm of Rivingtons the
publishers. Of this prolific
family, with a dozen and more children in each generation from the early 18th
century onwards, several sons entered either the publishing firm in St Paul's
Churchyard or, later, the St John's Square printing office. Alexander Rivington, founder son of Francis,
the second-generation publisher, was famed as "Printer and Scholar,” and
superintended the production of many learned publications. He retired in 1868. ' In the 1870s, after acquiring an extensive
plant of Oriental type, Rivingtons became England's chief Oriental
printers. The firm removed in 1901 to
their Little Sutton Street works, and subsequently became Clowes and Sons Ltd.
84, a later c 19 'flat iron' block, is topped off with attic
workshop windows.
Chapel. Beyond the Clarkes' house Wesleyan chapel was
to be built in 1848, by a congregation, which had formerly met in nearby
Wilderness Row. It had a seating capacity of
1,300, and cost £3,800, and was designed by James Wilson of Bath in Decorated
Gothic style, with a four-light window on its main east front towards the
square.
Coach and
Horses survives
as a 1960s rebuilding. Now a modern pub has a long history, having
been rebuilt more than once. In 1785 one
April morning it was totally burnt out - astonishingly leaving unscathed the timber
houses on either side, separated only by narrow alleyways.
Crypt of St John's. The crypt has its gruesome effigy of Sir William Weston, the last Prior.
The King's Master of the Revels was ensconced here in Elizabethan times. It was
his job to license plays before they were performed - an early censor - and
many of Shakespeare's and Marlowe's plays were licensed here. Later still, it
was the home of one of the first British magazines, the Gentleman’s Magazine,
under the editorship of Edward Cave, and has connections with Goldsmith and
Garrick, and Dr Johnson. This was one of the places where
"Scratching Fanny,” the supposed Cock Lane ghost, claimed to display
itself in 1763, but in this case failed to materialise. The mysterious noises were eventually exposed as a
fraud practised by the young daughter of William Parsons, officiating clerk of
St Sepulchre's, who was gaoled for a his part in it, but had meanwhile cleaned
up a small fortune from the curious crowds who flocked to the area to be
entertained by this nonsense - including Johnson and Walpole, who like many
others were disappointed of the sensation.
"Scratching Fanny's" coffin in the crypt was shown with many
others to interested visitors, well into the 19th century.
Shop everything else was rebuilt in the late 19th
century or later. One of the oldest
surviving buildings is the shop, date-plaque 1856, at the corner of Albemarle
Way
Gate House, a glass and tile egg box
replaced an 1849 Methodist chapel in the Gothic style demolished as redundant
in 1957
Heritage Centre
House adjoining the SW corner was in the late 18th
century the property of Mr Gabriel Gregory, carpenter, who in 1780 obtained
permission from the Paving Commissioners to remove the North Postern in order to
rebuild his house, thus leaving the south entrance to this narrow passage
"open from the ground to the sky".
Accordingly the two gates were demolished and the passageway left open,
as it is today.
Jerusalem Court, narrow and winding, was entered from the east
side of the square by an archway, and incorporated pan of other ancient
mansions, cut off from light by houses in Albemarle Street (now Way) to the
south. Rather improvidently, tall model
dwellings were erected on the north side of this Court: "very unhealthy,”
observed a Special Committee in December 1888, "without through
ventilation, and such as should never have been built.” Inspectors and medical officers referred the
case, and half a dozen others, between Sanitary Committee and Vestry, making
recommendations, while the wretched inhabitants still endured the abominable
conditions.
Little St John's Square
continuing westwards, beyond these
relatively humble properties we reach further grand houses. The odd extension, or "little
square", at the north-west corner of the enclosure came into the hands of
Dudley Lord North, through his son John's first wife, hence was sometimes known as "North's
Court". In 1708 this property was
described as "a pretty area of new brick buildings, lately erected",
and "a set of fairhouses, making three sides of a square" (that is,
as an extension of the main 'square' presumably on Lord North's property. Two of these were offices of Dove's, the
printers (no.22 and later 21)
Memorial Garden.
Lord Mottistone paid. Garden of Remembrance on site of chapel. Outline
of the church still in St John’s square. Site of church marked in bricks in the
pavement. Round nave of a military order.
Methodist chapel demolished replaced by Gate House
Museum of the order of St.John. The Museum in the
gatehouse preserves many carved fragments, especially from the ornate late c12
chancel, and from large oriel windows of the late c15 or early c16. In the
early c16, prominent members of the Priory staff had houses in the outer
precinct; from one of these may come terracotta fragments, possibly of continental
origin, found in excavations in Albion Place in 1990-4.
Penny Bank Chambers (1879), part of the Clerkenwell Road scheme,
was built as a good example of model dwellings: it was restored as craft workshops in
1975.
Princess Alice pub, called after the disaster
Priory Church was left a shell by incendiaries in 1941, its
18th-century interior destroyed. It now
has a reconstructed facade containing a narthex in front of its 18th-century west
front, and a plain interior within three later 15th/early 16th-century
walls. Only the 12th-century crypt was
untouched by bomb
Site of St.John’s Priory.
Occupies the site of the
courtyard of the priory. North postern until 1780. Sum
given by Henry VIII to attack the Turks at Rhodes in 1182. Priory of St.John
founded 1140 on land from Briant. Founded by Jordan Briset, Augustinian order
of the Knights of St. John. They had a hospital for the sick in Jerusalem with
lots of wounded crusaders in it. Lots of them joined the order with the black
cross on a white background. Theoderic came to London with lots of knights and
marched through the city with banners and spears to Clerkenwell - red cassock
and white cross as military dress. As soldiers they undertook privateering activities
and captured Rhodes, which was their headquarters. The Clerkenwell church had
the round nave of a military order in 1522 Sulieman the Magnificent had
captured Rhodes and the Knights had fled to Malta, so the London monks went
there too. 1540 dissolved and the Prior died of a heart attack. The Duke of
Somerset blew up the tower and used the stone to build Somerset House in
the Strand. Crypt of St John
Smith & Co., makers of clock components (founded 1780),
established their factory in 1812 on the site of another fine mansion,
birthplace in 1727 of John Wilkes, the politician. The firm, now non- ferrous metal Stockists,
St John's Gate, 1845 then a tavern, came under threat and was
declared unsafe. The architect W P
Griffith luckily intervened to save it, and a substantial restoration was undertaker, including
the creation of a new set of fake crenellations for the parapet. In 1874 the Gate was, as we have seen,
re-acquired by the revived Order, later the Most Venerable Order of St John,
and has since served as its headquarters and (later) also as its Library and
Museum.
St John's Square evolved from the
inner courtyard of the priory; part of the
court was regrettably lost to Clerkenwell Road,
which now cuts it off from the medieval gatehouse in St John's Lane.
The priory buildings, used by the Office of Revels in the c16, began to be replaced by individual houses
from c. 1630. By the mid c19 these housed numerous specialized
craftsmen, especially jewellers,
watchmakers and printers. The side of
the square still has a pleasing c18 appearance. A small
open space, cut through by Victorian Clerkenwell Road, succeeds the mediaeval
St John's Priory court surrounded by peripheral buildings. Of these only St
John's Gate and the shell of the church remain above ground. Many of the Priory
buildings survived until at least the late 17th century, occupied by members of
the nobility. Large private mansions then replaced them, e.g. Bishop Burner's
house on the west side, swallowed up in 1879 by Clerkenwell Road. From there in
1710 during the Sacheverell Riots, Burnet witnessed the Ann-Dissenting mob
sacking St John's Church, at that" time used as a Presbyterian
chapel. Tudor
old road started here and up. Old Road
to York Road, Maidenhead Lane. 37 years
before 1826. Wesleyan church, Gothic
next to the gateway given to the London Mission Centre after 50 years. Area of the court of the priory
Near the gate stands an old-world
smithy; Smithfield's horse-drawn traffic provides plenty of work
St. John's Church 1185, consecrated by the Patriarch of Jerusalem. 1140 and 1180. Destroyed in 1380 during the Peasants
Revolt. Rebuilt on the site of the priory church perpendicular. In 1723 and given a new west front and cupola. The
parish church for Clerkenwell until 1931, then became the St.John's area
church, bombed out in 1941 and now a simple hall inside. Church very dramatic
quality unsurpassed. W.Taylor. St.John the Baptist. Altar. Plate, monuments.
Paintings taken during the dissolution are back. Modern looking church. Many
monuments. Parts of the choir walls were incorporated in
the 18th-century building; the original church had a round nave (as usual with
the Order of St John) the outline of which is marked on the ground in the
Square. In 1931 the church reverted to the order, but it was very severely
damaged in 1941 by incendiary bombs. Rebuilding was begun in 1955 to designs by
Lord Mottistone, and includes a public garden surrounded by a memorial
cloister. Below the chancel survives the original Crypt, is a major 12th treasure, the three west bays of which are pure Norman work of about 1140, while
the two east bays and the side chapels were completed about 1170. . The nave of
the Priory church has been twice destroyed. Its original circular nave, burnt
out in 1381 during the Peasants' Revolt, and now marked by a double row of
cobbles, was replaced in Perpendicular style to a rectangular plan. After the
English Order's suppression in 1540 it served various uses, including as a
private chapel. In 1723, restored at the expense of Simon Michell, it was given
a new West front and a cupola, and used as a second parish church for
Clerkenwell until 1931, when the modern Order of St John acquired it as their
Priory church. The building with its elaborate Georgian galleries and fittings
was entirely burnt out by incendiary bombs in 1941, and was subsequently
restored as a simple hall church. The original crypt, however, has withstood
fires, wars and bombs and is one of London's very few surviving
12th-century`buildings. The exterior gives little sign that the crypt is one of London's major c12 treasures. It lies below a
choir, which was rebuilt in 1721-3 as a plain Georgian parish church, reusing
parts of the medieval outer walls. After gutting in the Second World War the
church was restored and extended in 1955-8 by Seely & Paget, and one sees
first their one-storey Neo-Georgian elliptical narthex enclosing a new entrance
for the crypt, and an early c18 wall visible above, of red brick with stone
pilasters. The part of the medieval church has disappeared; it consisted in the
c12 of a circular nave, inspired by the church of the Holy Sepulchre at
Jerusalem, as was the practice of both this Order and the Templars. This was
replaced by a more conventional aisled rectangle before 1381, when the church
was sacked during the Peasants' Revolt. Both replacement nave and a massive
tower added c. 1500 were destroyed by Protector Somerset after the Dissolution,
to provide building material for Somerset House, leaving only the choir standing.
Inside the narthex, a 020 double stair, intended for processions, descends to
the crypt. On each side is visible the start of the curved c12 wall of the
round nave, with bases of two c12 internal pilasters. The crypt is of two
dates. The unaisled mid-c12 part has three bays with simple rib vaults and
plain transverse arches, and a fourth bay where only springers to the vault
survive. The ribs appear to have had applied plaster enrichment with chevron,
originally painted red. The late c12 enlargement (probably complete at the
consecration of 1185) added two bays, which extend transeptally for one bay on
one side and two on the other. These
parts have the more elaborate mouldings of the late c12: triple-shafted
responds, ribs with triple rolls, the centre one keeled, and transverse arches
with pronounced angle rolls, transept is a vaulted chamber, from which the
early c12 exterior wall is visible: ashlar-faced with pilasters with chamfered
bases. The crypt was restored and refitted by J. 0. Scott in 1900-1 and 1904-7.
Font Octagonal on a renewed quatrefoiled base. From the Preceptory at Hogshaw,
Bucks. – Altar Frontal, embroidered with figures in ovals, Italian c1, brought
from Florence. – Stained glass early c0, by Nicholson. - Monuments Sir William
Weston, Prior of St John, 1540, emaciated corpse wrapped in a shroud and placed
on a flat rush mat; a fragment of a larger tomb whose Gothic canopy is known
from drawings. - Knight of St John, assumed to be Juan Ruiz de Vergara, proctor
of the Langue of Castile in the Order of St John, originally in Valladolid
Cathedral. Given in 1914.
Alabaster. Recumbent effigy with
sleeping son or page. Of a quality unsurpassed in London or England.
Convincingly attributed to the Castilian sculptor Esteban Jordan. The pedestal
was designed by C. M. 0. Scott, 1916.
The post-war church has a frugal whitewashed aisleless interior. At the
end, responds of former aisles: late c1, with keeled shafts, four major, eight
minor, important evidence of Transitional Gothic forms in London. Perpendicular
windows. Two corbels high up relate to the former c18 gallery. Reredos. Two big carved corsoles and a panel with
cherubs' heads. Early c18 doorway. In the
Museum, two fine painted wings from late c15 Flemish altarpiece, formerly in
the Priory church. The area of the church was laid out as a memorial garden
after the war, approached through a Tuscan archway below a caretaker's flat. On
the side of the church, blocked openings are visible between stone buttresses
restored in 1907-8. Some decoration,
perhaps from the time of the early c16 Docwra Chapel which stood near the
church. A cloister arcade. In its centre a Crucifixion by Cecil Thomas, 1951
with flat terminal panels in an Eric Gill tradition.
The Knights Hospitallers' Priory of St John, a wealthy
establishment which became head of the Order in England, was founded c. 1144 by
Jordan Briset or Bricett, a Suffolk landowner who held property in
Clerkenwell. Its precinct, covering
about six acres, was bounded by Turnmill Street, Cowcross Street, St John
Street and Clerkenwell Green. Within this, an inner precinct was entered by the
gatehouse in St John's Lane, leading to the church in the present St John's
Square the two brutally separated since the 1870s by Clerkenwell Road. Gateway and church are the chief survivals,
but scattered evidence of medieval foundations has been found beneath buildings
in and around the square
Wesleyan Chapel, untouched by the 1879 roadworks, was burnt
out in 1941 in war damage, temporarily reopened in 1949, but finally closed and
demolished in 1957.
Wilkes's House Possibly a little to the east of Aylesbury
House was one owned by a rich maltster, Israel Wilkes, father to the celebrated
Radical politician John Wilkes, who was born here in 1727. House and business were inherited by John's
brother Heaton, who or before 1747 built a distillery adjoining it to the east. John Wilkes is known have visited his
brother's house as Alderman, at least in 1770.
From 1783 until 1810 the tenant was Francis Magniac, a famous merchant
and goldsmith, and Colonel of the Clerkenwell Volunteers during the Napoleonic
Wars With Daniel Beale who traded with China in musical automata and fancy
mechanical clocks. Later the premises
became a warehouse for Dove's, the printers, whose offices and printing works
were in the range of houses at the opposite corner of the square Actual
ownership of the mansion and ground passed in 1793 to the Walpole family. Eventually the house was demolished and the
property acquired by J Smith and Sons, another clock making firm. John Smith had begun as a manufacturer of
watch and clock glasses, but in 1845 extended to actual clock making and built
here the largest clock factory in Clerkenwell.
All branches of craftsmen were employed and all manufacturing processes
covered, from brass founding to clock making and from seasoning timber to
clock-case making. Next door to Smith's
the newly founded British Horological Institute, briefly had its offices in
1859, before moving to purpose-built headquarters in Northampton Square
Tompion Street
Was Lower Smith Street. Became
Tompion Street, appropriate enough for the area, though now a token name, being
mostly destroyed in the war, and given way to topographically unrelated Council
blocks. Northampton Estate development.
Topham Street
Triangle
Maisonettes 1970s for the GLC. Overbearing. Replaced low
rent scheme for the Improved Industrial Dwellings Company, Compton Dwellings
1872.
Tysoe Street
Spa Fields' had an association with
radical activity, until streets covered the area, which had previously been
used for meetings. Peculiarity in the
diagonal entry, whose line was determined by one of the network of old
field-paths crossing New River land.
When bricks and mortar superseded fields, the new Clerkenwell street
pattern crystallised the line of six old paths converging on what became the
junction of Rosoman and Exmouth Streets.
Three Crowns.
Supposed to be called after James I who united three crowns.
Upper Rosoman Street
Spa Fields' had an association with
radical activity, until streets covered the area which had previously been used
for meetings
Vineyard Walk
Attempt to grow grapes. Then a pleasure ground 'Mont
Plaisance'
Wakley Street
8 National Children's' Bureau
Walmsley Street
Northampton Square's original six
intersecting streets were mostly renamed in the rationalisation of London names
in 1935. Lower Charles Street became
Walmsley Street,
after Dr Robert Walmsley d.1924, first Principal of the new Northampton
Institute; but it disappeared under the 1966 building extension Lower Charles Street was originally an earlier
lane Taylor's Row, 1792-4, renamed in 1814.
Warner Street
Coldbath fields. Huskisson and Towers fine chemicals
Chiappa building there with signs up. Empty
Warner House
Coach and Horses neo Jacobean 1900 – site of Hockley in
the Hole Bear Garden.
Whiskin Street
Wilmington Square
Spa Fields' had an association with
radical activity, until streets covered the area, which had previously been
used for meetings. Wilmington Square was
originally to have extended to Margaret Street; some houses appear in 1818 map as
"building.” Cromwell notes in 1828
that it was still unfinished, and presumably for financial reasons would be
"completed in a form more circumscribed than was at first determined on,
and with houses of a less lofty character" Accordingly the square was
reduced in depth, with its north side built well short of Margaret Street, in
1829-31 Its style is simpler than the downhill south range, and of one storey
less, achieving an equivalent skyline by a raised basement, above which is a
pedestrian terrace adjoining the centre garden.(It could not be served by a
road, for the road now ran behind the terrace. The west side was completed,
though hardly occupied, by 1829, but is already shown in the 1828 map. Curtailment of the square meant that it was
tucked away in what was a backwater - until 1970s traffic management included
it in a main lorry route. Wilmington
Square has come through war and social change not entirely unscathed. The
square belongs to the group with 'unrelated terraces', like Canonbury. Except for the slightly higher ground, and
the reconstructed corner, all are of four floors plus basement. The earlier side is fairly standard, stuccoed
ground floors with circular-headed windows.
The somewhat heavy quality
of this terrace is a reminder of what must have been the oppressive effect of
Holford Square. Back gardens disappeared
long ago,
when Wilson's John Street, incorporated as a terrace into Rosebery Avenue in
the 1890s, and damaged in the Second World War, was rebuilt in the 1950s as
Council flats.
1 end house sports a pediment. Most of the end houses on all sides having
'extended' front doors. Some have window
guards rather than balconies.
1-5 is individual.
6-7 in the centre have balconies with continuous
anthemion motif, nos.
8 door now recessed.
8-11 have been reconstructed laterally since the
war, damaged in the war have been rebuilt and combined laterally, with a single
front door.
10 1835 the Rev. W J Hall, whose book of psalms
and hymns sold 4 million copies, lived here
1-12 grand south terrace
appeared only in 1824. Much the most elaborate on the South side,
all ground floors stuccoed and with circular-headed windows. The three centre
houses and one at either end slightly advanced, rusticated, and with circular-headed
first-floor windows as well.
12 is canted out to
adapt to the diagonal entry of Tysoe Street.
In the late 1830s Wilson,
its builder, occupied this house. Oddly
it had only a parapet with a wreath, reconstructed 1989 with a very basic
pediment and, alas, no wreath, but a small pediment on the centre block,
adorned with crossed laurel branches, harmonises this lopsidedness. The stringcourse is raised to the base of the
second-floor windows.
13-14. 1825, are distinguished from 15-21 only by
their balconies. Below the bedroom floor
is a cornice, but no string course. Panels
inset below the ground-floor windows bring their bases down to threshold
level. Appeared only in 1824.
15-21 appear in Horwood's 1818 map, as
"building"
18-21
have an
interlaced design. Now joined
horizontally
20 The east side early became offices, and in 1888
Aubrey Beardsley was working in the office of the District Surveyor here.
21 the door and hallway extend to Merlin
Street. Front door double-panelled with
circular mouldings,
railings halberd with urn terminals. Most of the end houses on all sides having
'extended' front doors. Some have window
guards rather than balconies.
22-24 destroyed in the 1930s for rebuilding as part
of the austerely impressive Expressionist Police Flats block
25 On the end wall of blind windows break up the
brickwork expanse. Most of the end houses on all sides having 'extended' front
doors. Some have window guards rather than
balconies.
25-37, its entity as a 'terrace' is marked only by
slightly advancing end houses and distinguishing them with round-headed
first-floor windows. Along its high
pedestrian walk, has only three floors and basement, and like the other side
has panels below the windows, and double-panelled doors, though without the
circles. Windows have individual
balconies; some on the ground floor have window guards.
27 Herbert Spencer had run an office as a railway
engineer here, quitting it for philosophy when the firm derailed.
31 Its entity as a 'terrace' is marked only by slightly advancing the
centre
37 most of the end houses on all sides having
'extended' front doors. Some have window
guards rather than balconies.
38-39, the short range north of Attneave Street,
were completed only in 1840, and in the 1960s were condemned as unsafe and
rebuilt by the Council approximately in facsimile with a single central front
door. Tactful
rebuilding flats
behind replica fronts matching the square.
The
centre not filled in until 1841.
40-47 approximately balancing the opposite nine of 13-21,
40 most of the end houses on all sides having
'extended' front doors. Some have window
guards rather than balconies. The chief
difference from the E side is the stringcourse between first and second floors. Nos.
Gardens. Managed by the vestry of Clerkenwell. In 1895, when the neighbourhood had long been
densely populated. Lord Compton in the
name of the Marquess of Northampton presented the square gardens, covering
almost an acre, to Finsbury Vestry for public use. With seats and flowerbeds it soon became an
attractive and much needed small park.
This was at a time when its "uninteresting" early-19th century
architecture was dismissed by contemporaries as the "hideously inartistic
style of that period"
Wilmington Street
Another
parcel, which belonged to the Northampton Estate,
built up piecemeal 1819-31 by a builder, John Wilson. 11
squalid
courts which developed on the Northampton lat between
Wilmington Square and the Lloyd Baker Estate was cleared
in the 1920s
Woodbridge Estate
A
surprisingly complete early c19 enclave. It belonged to the Sekforde Charity, used
also to endow almshouse at Woodbridge,
Suffolk, and was laid out from 1827 by C. Cockerell,
surveyor to the charity, and his assistant.
Most of the building took place in the 1830s-40s. Two new streets, Woodbridge Street and Sekforde Street, replaced a
warren of small buildings that had
grown up within the outer precinct of the nunnery. The Sekforde Estate/
Woodbridge Estate was owned by Sekforde, Elizabeth Cooper and Master of the
Guard of Recruits, by Christopher Saxon, Elizabethan surveyor. There is an almshouse in Woodbridge where he
was buried. The Estate was built and the
mansion demolished 1767. Almshouse
sundial in the six bits of 60 year lists, 1826 no act for leaves. Revenue of
estate intended for the aged poor in Woodbridge. Developed the streets around.
Woodbridge Street
Woodbridge House in the angle of Woodbridge and Sekforde Streets. The
Sekforde (Woodbridge) Estate This land was owned by Thomas Sekforde, an
Elizabethan lawyer and Master of the Coun of Requests. He was a patron of
Christopher Saxton, the great Elizabethan surveyor and mapmaker. Sekforde
retired about 1581 to an estate in Clerkenwell whose revenues he bequeathed to
an almshouse he founded in his native town of Woodbridge, Suffolk, where he was
buried in 1588. The estate was subsequently built over and the large mansion
demolished, and in 1767 the almshouse governors divided the land into six pans
on 60-year-leases. In 1826 a private Act of Parliament was secured for granting
new 99-year building leases. Sekforde Estate was bounded by St John Street,
Aylesbury Street, St James's Walk, Corporation Row and the wall of the House of
Detention. Early lessees included two large distilleries, one of them
Nicholson's (founded 1815), which in 1970 vacated the St John Street premises.
The high boundary wall in Woodbridge Street dates from 1828. Woodbridge House,
which still has the look of a small country mansion, backs on to the angle of
Woodbridge and Sekforde Streets. Built on one of the original plots, it
belonged at one time to George Friend, a gentleman-dyer to the East India
Company, who erected his dye-houses nearby. The Clerkenwell Vestry Clerk,
William Cook, acquired the property in 1807 and, hoping to renew the lease,
removed the timber dye-houses and rebuilt the mansion for £4000, only to have a
further lease refused. From 1848-70 the Finsbury Dispensary operated here: it
had been founded in 1780 to provide free medicines for the poor and was housed
variously in St John's Square, St. john Street and King Street. Woodbridge
House's odd situation backing on to the corner was caused by the lay-out of
Sekforde and Woodbridge Streets in 1828 Much of the NE range of Woodbridge
Street, which had become ruinous or even destroyed, has been successfully
reconstructed in facsimile by the Borough Council, and the other houses
sensitively restored. The western leg of the street, long gutted for industrial
use, has been restored behind the facades.
Yeoman's House is a private
development of offices and units in a yard behind this range.
Old Woodbridge Chapel. built by Independent Calvinists in 1824 and in 1833 became it
Clerkenwell and Islington Medical Mission, In
1898 it was bought by Water Cress and Flower Girls Mission – which
became John Grooms. It has a simple
brick exterior, the front with round-arched upper windows, in keeping with the
contemporary housing of the Sekforde Estate Galleried interior, reconstructed
in the c19, now floored. Features in films 'About a Boy’.,
Used to be pub called Noah's ark
Bank
Red Bull Theatre, contemporary with
Shakespeare's Globe and Edward Alleyn's Fortune Theatre, once stood in Red Bull
Yard, on the corner site of Nicholson's premises. Alleyn was among those who
acted at the theatre, and Pepys is known to have visited it.
Wyclif Street?
Was Lower Ashby Street.
Northampton Estate. Partly survives. It was named after Castle Ashby, the Earls'
Northamptonshire seat, and its eastern half.
Is now plain Ashby Street, while the western portion was renamed Wyclif
Street in 1935.
35-36 British
Horological Institute. From 1860 -1978 rebuilt were the headquarters
of the Institute, founded in 1858. In
this building, signals from Greenwich Observatory were received twice daily.
The Institute removed in 1978 to Upton Hall, Newark.
Vicarage. Built on
the site of the Northampton Manor House, survives, serving for St James's.
Wynyatt Street
Leases
dating from 1800.
Moorgreen House
Southwood Court
Yardley Street
Spa Fields' had an association with
radical activity, until streets covered the area which had previously been used
for meetings
Old peoples flats behind Victorian frontage.
Wilmington Arms
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