Former name(s) |
|
---|---|
Area | St Martin's Le Grand |
Location | City of London |
Postal code | EC1A |
Coordinates | 51°30′58″N0°5′51″W / 51.51611°N 0.09750°W Coordinates: 51°30′58″N0°5′51″W / 51.51611°N 0.09750°W |
Other | |
Known for | The Angel Inn |
Angel Street, formerly known as Angel Alley, Angel Court, and Angell Street, is a street in the City of London that runs between King Edward Street in the west and St Martin's Le Grand in the east. Although dating back to at least 1542, no original buildings now remain due to the effects of the Great Fire of London, the London Blitz, and redevelopment.
Buildings in the street were damaged in the Great Fire of 1666 when Poulterer's Hall was destroyed, and in the early nineteenth century many buildings were demolished for redevelopment and due to their "ruinous" state. [1] The Angel Inn, which dated from the 17th century, survived on the north side until around 1840.
In the late nineteenth century, the General Post Office (West), which included the Central Telegraph Office, was built on the south side of the street and a further post office building soon after replaced the whole of the north side of the street. In 1940, the telegraph office was seriously damaged during the London Blitz and subsequently demolished in 1967. The site is now occupied by the BT Centre (1984) so that today the street consists solely of two long office frontages.
Angel Street runs between King Edward Street (originally Butcher Hall Lane) in the west and St Martin's Le Grand in the east. [2] In the Middle Ages, Angel Alley was regarded as part of the sanctuary of St Martin's Le Grand and a witness in a 1536–1537 Star Chamber case testified that the future Cardinal Morton took sanctuary in Angel Alley in the fifteenth century. [3] Angel Alley is also mentioned as within the College of St Martin's Le Grand in the Letters and Papers of the Reign of Henry VIII for 1542. [4]
John Strype referred to it as Angel Alley in his 1720 survey which was based on John Stow's surveys of 1598 and 1603 [5] and William Herbert gave its former name as Angel Court. [6] It is recorded as Angel Street on John Ogilby and William Morgan's Large Scale Map of the City As Rebuilt By 1676 [2] which shows the plan of London after its rebuilding following the fire. The eastern end of the street was part of the Liberty of St Martin's Le Grand. [6]
The Poulters' Hall stood on the corner of Butcher Hall Lane and Angel Street from 1630 until it was burned in the Great Fire of London in 1666 [7] and the Angel coaching inn stood on the north side from the 17th century. It is unknown whether the inn was named after the street or vice versa. [4]
King's Head Court was established on the south side on the corner with St Martin's Le Grand by 1746 and appears on John Rocque's map of that year. [8]
In 1809, the Angel Inn was described in The Picture of London as "much frequented by Scotch gentlemen and persons from the North". [9] In 1825, the same directory listed it as among the principal inns visited by mail and stage coaches in London, and a hotel, coffee-house, and tavern. [10] The inn was demolished in around 1840. [11]
It was also in the early decades of the nineteenth century that a number of buildings in Angel Street were acquired to allow for the expansion of Christ's Hospital, including the Queen's Head (Queen's Hotel) on the north side on the corner with St Martin's Le Grand. Houses on the north side were demolished and the land let by the governors of the hospital to allow for the building of a new Bull and Mouth Inn. On the south side at the St Martin's Le Grand end, a number of houses described as "very ruinous" were demolished in Angel Street and King's Head Court in 1835 after they were condemned by a ward-inquest. [1]
In 1869, [12] work started on a new post office building known as General Post Office (West) to distinguish it from the old General Post Office building on the east side of St Martin Le Grand. It opened in 1874, also becoming the post office's Central Telegraph Office. [13] Following the construction of the telegraph office, Bath Street, later known as Roman Bath Street, was joined to the south side of Angel Street which connected it to Newgate Street in the south. It had formerly been known as Bagnio Court in reference to the Turkish baths that stood there. [14] In 1890, the foundation stone was laid for the construction of a building known as General Post Office (North) which took up the whole of the north side of Angel Street and led to the demolition of the remaining buildings on that side of the street. It was designed by Henry Tanner. [15] [16]
The telegraph office was slightly damaged by a bomb during the First World War, and more seriously during the London Blitz in 1940 when burning debris from adjacent buildings set it alight and totally destroyed the interior. [12] [17] It reopened in 1943 but closed again in 1962 and was demolished in 1967. [12]
The BT Centre, formerly the headquarters of British Telecom, opened in 1984 and now occupies the whole southern side of Angel Street including the former course of Bath Street, which was closed in 1934. [12] The former post office building on the northern side of Angel Street is now known as Nomura House at 1 St Martin's Le Grand. [18]
The Honourable Society of the Middle Temple, commonly known simply as Middle Temple, is one of the four Inns of Court exclusively entitled to call their members to the English Bar as barristers, the others being the Inner Temple, Gray's Inn and Lincoln's Inn. It is located in the wider Temple area of London, near the Royal Courts of Justice, and within the City of London. As a liberty, it functions largely as an independent local government authority.
Fleet Street is a major street mostly in the City of London. It runs west to east from Temple Bar at the boundary with the City of Westminster to Ludgate Circus at the site of the London Wall and the River Fleet from which the street was named.
An alley or alleyway is a narrow lane, path, or passageway, often reserved for pedestrians, which usually runs between, behind, or within buildings in the older parts of towns and cities. It is also a rear access or service road, or a path, walk, or avenue in a park or garden.
Bishopsgate was one of the eastern gates in London's former defensive wall. The gate gave its name to the Bishopsgate Ward of the City of London. The ward is traditionally divided into Bishopsgate Within, inside the line wall, and Bishopsgate Without beyond it. Bishopsgate Without is described as part of London's East End.
Aldersgate is a Ward of the City of London, named after one of the northern gates in the London Wall which once enclosed the City.
Moorgate was one of the City of London's northern gates in its defensive wall, the last to be built. The gate took its name from the Moorfields, an area of marshy land that lay immediately north of the wall.
The Angel, Islington, is a historic landmark and a series of buildings that have stood on the corner of Islington High Street and Pentonville Road in Islington, London, England. The land originally belonged to the Clerkenwell Priory and has had various properties built on it since the 16th century. An inn on the site was called the "Angel Inn" by 1614, and the crossing became generally known as "the Angel". The site was bisected by the New Road, which opened in 1756, and properties on the site have been rebuilt several times up to the 20th century. The corner site gave its name to Angel tube station, opened in 1901, and the surrounding Angel area of London.
Abbey Wood is an area in southeast London, England, straddling the border between the Royal Borough of Greenwich and the London Borough of Bexley. It is located 10.6 miles (17 km) east of Charing Cross.
St. Martin's Le Grand is a former liberty within the City of London, and is the name of a street north of Newgate Street and Cheapside and south of Aldersgate Street. It forms the southernmost section of the A1 road.
Broad Street is one of the 25 ancient wards of the City of London.
Cheap is a small ward in the City of London. It stretches west to east from King Edward Street, the border with Farringdon Within ward, to Old Jewry, which adjoins Walbrook; and north to south from Gresham Street, the border with Aldersgate and Bassishaw wards, to Cheapside, the boundary with Cordwainer and Bread Street wards. The name Cheap derives from the Old English word "chep" for "market".
Baynard House is a brutalist office block in Queen Victoria Street in Blackfriars in the City of London, occupied by BT Group. It was built on the site of Baynard's Castle. Most of the land under it is a scheduled monument. From 1982 to 1997 it housed the BT Museum.
Cleveland Street in central London runs north to south from Euston Road (A501) to the junction of Mortimer Street and Goodge Street. It lies within Fitzrovia, in the W1 post code area. Cleveland Street also runs along part of the border between Bloomsbury (ward) which is located in London Borough of Camden, and West End (ward) and Marylebone High Street (ward) in the City of Westminster. In the 17th century, the way was known as the Green Lane, when the area was still rural, or Wrastling Lane, after a nearby amphitheatre for boxing and wrestling.
Lombard Street is a street notable for its connections with the City of London's merchant, banking and insurance industries, stretching back to medieval times.
The General Post Office in St. Martin's Le Grand was the main post office for London between 1829 and 1910, the headquarters of the General Post Office of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and England's first purpose-built post office. It was demolished in 1912.
This is a list of the etymology of street names in the City of London.
Trump Street is a street in the City of London that was originally known as Trumpadere Street, probably after the trumpet or horn makers who once worked there or in the adjacent Trump Alley. It was built after the Great Fire of London (1666) but completely destroyed by bombing during the Second World War and has since been entirely rebuilt.
The Bull and Mouth Inn was a coaching inn in the City of London that dated from before the Great Fire of London in 1666. It was located between Bull and Mouth Street in the north and Angel Street in the south. It was once an important arrival and departure point for coaches from all over Britain, but particularly for the north of England and Scotland. It became the Queen's Hotel in 1830 but was demolished in 1887 or 1888 when new post office buildings were built in St Martin's Le Grand.
Bull and Mouth Street was a street in the City of London that ran between Edward Street and St Martin's Le Grand. On part of its site stands Postman's Park.
Coney Street is a major shopping street in the city centre of York, in England. The street runs north-west from the junction of Spurriergate and Market Street, to St Helen's Square. New Street leads off the north-east side of the street, as does a snickelway leading to the Judge's Court hotel, while several snickelways lead from the south-west side down to the River Ouse, including Blanshard's Lane, and paths leading to City Screen.