Skip to main content
Museum of Freemasonry

Masonic Periodicals Online

  • Explore
  • Advanced Search
  • Home
  • Explore
  • The Freemason's Chronicle
  • Sept. 7, 1878
  • Page 2
Current:

The Freemason's Chronicle, Sept. 7, 1878: Page 2

  • Back to The Freemason's Chronicle, Sept. 7, 1878
  • Print image
  • Articles/Ads
    Article A STROLL IN BARBICAN AND ITS VICINITY. Page 1 of 2
    Article A STROLL IN BARBICAN AND ITS VICINITY. Page 1 of 2 →
Page 2

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Stroll In Barbican And Its Vicinity.

A STROLL IN BARBICAN AND ITS VICINITY .

THJJ GKOKGE TAVERX , AUSTRALIAN AVEXUK . EVEN those who can only carry their recollection of the City and its principal thoroughfares some twenty or five-andtwenty years back , can hardly repress a feeling of surprise at the changes which have been wrought in that brief period of time . Where wore close and stifling alleys , ill-bnilt ancl ill-paved streets , lined

on both sides with—for so wealthy and important a City as Londonvery ill-conditioned houses , there now will bo found broad and wollpaved thoroughfares , lined with blccks of buildings which certainly deserve the description of p-. ilatial . So rapidly aro these changes being made , that a few years hence thoso who can remember what the City was , say as recently as the year of tho Great Exhibition , will

hardly recognise it for tho same . True , it took a long time for tho worthy Londoners to bestir themselves , bnt tho Spirit of Improvement once aroused , has exerted itself most vigorously , till thero is a reasonable chance that little of the old streets and houses will remain mnch longer unimproved ; or , to pnfc the matter differently , what still remains of old London—not so very old either , it must be

remembered—will bo pulled down and rebuilt on a , grander and moro imposing scale . Perhaps , no neighbourhood has witnessed greater changes in this respect than that included in tho Ward of Cripplegate , and especially in those parts of it which verge on Aldersgate-street and tho Barbican . These and snch other familier names as Red Cross-street , White Cross-street , Jttwin-streot , & c , & c , remain , bnt ,

to use a common mode of expression , wero any of their former inhabitants to resume their mortal coil , and appear onco again amid the scenes of thoir busy livelihood , it is certain the } - would be unable to recognise tho streets and houses of to-day as those with which they were so familiar . And these changes which a fow years havo brought about , aro a sufficient reason for preserving some knowledge

of different City localities , as thoy were in former days . Even the most matter of fact and prosaic person must ; take some delight in hearing or reading of the people who lived where now thoy toil and strive to mako their fortnnes , and this feeling is likely to be tho stronger , the more considerable aro tho improvements which have been made . There is something more than mere sentiment—or ab all

events tho sentiment is highly creditable to those who indulge in itwhen peoplo recall that this great noble or statesman , that poet or soldier , passed a portion of his life in this qniet unpretending street , or , that now important and imposing thoroughfare . Most peoplo , indeed , delight in knowing something of tho place in whioh they dwell , and thero is perhaps no kind of literature so generally

popular as that which treats of tho former history of localities and districts . Thus little or no apology is needed fur the sketch wo have presently compiled . The Georrje , $ o ably administered by mine host , has no history of its own to boast of , but it is in the centre of a district which has , aud a very interesting record it is . A few years since , and Australian-avenue , iu

which it stands , was a mere blind alloy , with a not particularly attractive pawnbroker ' s shop at its entrance ; now thoro are on either side of it large and commanding premises , and the hostelry itself is by no moans tho least attractive building in the avenue . Nor is it tho least important ; for a well-conducted tavern , if not exactly " a thin " of beauty and a joy for ever , " is certainly , 1 most desirable place , and

likely to be frequented by sensible men of business at the inevitable hour of the day , when tho "inner man" asserts himself , ancl only a " grill" or" cut from the joint" will briug him to his senses again . But of this part of onr subject we shall speak anon . The time for a jniey steak has not yet come , ancl iu tho meantime , let ns take a turn in the neighbourhood , and see not only what ib is now , but trv and recal

something of its former history . The aveune is on tho sonth side of the Barbican , and nearest to where- that street meets Aldersgate-street . Hero afc once we have something to interest us . Barbican , according to Stow , and tho other London Antiquaries , derives its name from the " Burgh Kennin , " or " postern tower , " which stood ou the north side of the street

opposite to Redcross-street , and the remains of which were still in existence towards the end of last century . In this tower , Bagford tells ns , " tho Romans kept watch and ward at night that they might give notice of conflagrations or the approach of an enemy , ancl here on the top of the turret they lit bonfires to guide travellers to the City . " Iu Edward III . ' s reign it was entrusted to Robert UfTord , Earl

of Suffolk , and it remained in his family till the reign of Mary , when it was in the keeping of the Baroness Katherine Wiilonghby d'Eresby , a baroness in her own right , and widow of Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk , who lived in a siately mansion close by . This lady narrowly escaped being burnt at the stake for calling her lap-do . ? Gardiner , after the bishop of that name , and dressing him up in episcopal rochet

and surplice . For this she and her second husband , Richard Bertie , had to flee the country , and they sought refuge in Poland . Ou thssito of Bridgwater-sqimre stood the mansion of tho Enrls of Bridgwater . It was burnt down in 1 GS 7 , when Charles Viscount Bracklcy and his brother Thomas perished in the flames . Sir Thomas Spefman , author of tho " Glossaiinm , " died at his house in Barbican in

1640 . Beech . lane , according to Stow , was so named after Sir Nicholas de la Beech , lieutenant of tho Tower , who was deprived of his olliceby Edward III . An old house in Barbican , once belonging to the Abbot of uamsay , was called afterwards Drewrio House , from Sit Drew Drewrio , an owner thereof , and this was inhabited subsequently by the gallant old cavalier chief , Prince Rupert . To another house

tho great John Milton migrated from Aldorsgate-strcofc , remaining till 1 G 47 , when he went to live in High Holborn . In time , however , the street lost its gentility , and it is mentioned by Strype as inhabited chiffly by clothes-salesmen , while in his day ou the site of thj oli watch tower stood a watchhonse for the brawling mohocks of tho day . It was also along this street that the authorities of Cripplegate were

A Stroll In Barbican And Its Vicinity.

wont to go in procession when beating the parish bounds , and when thoy reached tho south-western end , they set np a post opposite to the Boar's Head , now known as the Brown Bear , and kept by that gonial ancl obliging host , Mr . Frederick Wykes , ancl then crossing to tho north side , proceeded np Goswell-road . It will farther interest members of tho great Masonic Fraternity

—and mine host of tho Georgo is a brother—to know thafc tho present Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 , met afc tho Red Cross , Barbican , during the years 173 ( 5-45 . It is also worthy of noto thafc in Edward I . ' s time tho Barbican was Crown property , for an Inquisition mado in tho third year of that monarch ' s reign , re Purprestnros in tho City , showed that some twelve years

before , one Thomas Juvenal had appropriated some ground without " le Earbchin , " and inclosed it with an earth wall , and it was held at the timo of the Inquisition by the Sheriffs by Master Nicholas Brabanzonne , who was summoned at command of the King ' s justices , and said ho had nothing to do with it , and laid no claim to the Purpresture , being tenant to Thomas Fitzsimon do Burgh . Aud the said

Thomas came , and prayed ho might arrent ifc afc threepence per annnm , which was granted , because the twelve sworn men swore the enclosure was no annoyance . It was further adjudged that tho King might recover the arrearages , to wifc , three shillings , but no forfeiture , because it was not tho said Thomas ' s doings . Between Whitecross-street and Golding-lane , stood fche Fortune ,

one of the earliest aud most important of the bllizabtitluiu theatres . Ifc was opened about 1 G 00 by Philip Heuslowo and Edward Alleyne , founder of Dulwich College , aud what till quite recently was an adjoining passage , but is now a broad street , still retains the namo of Playhouse-yard . In Golding-lane was tho Nursery , mentionod moro than onee by Pepys in his Diary , and also by Drydon ,

a seminary established in the reign of Charles II . for training children to tho profession of tho stage . Nor must wo forget mention of a certain building in Whitecross-street , which till quite a recent date was used as a Debtors' Prison , while it was in this street that Dr . Williams established his Free Library for Dissenting Ministers , now removed to Grafton-street , Fitzroy-sqnaro . Eedcross-sfcreet , so

called from tho Cross opposite Golden-lane , has associated with it one curious anecdote related by Sir Thomas More in his Life of Edward V ., in which he tells how that on the night after tho morning thafc Edward IV . died , a man called at the house of one Pettier , a servant of Richard Duke of Gloucester , who resided in the street , and Pettier , when he heard tho news , said , " Then will my master , the

Duke of Gloucester , be King , and that I warrant thee . And we know he did become King as Richard III . If we turn to Aldersgate-street wo shall find ample matter to satisfy our craving for historical associations . Wo have already mentioned that Milton lived here , until he moved to a house in Barbican . On tho east side of tho street , Nos . 35 to 33 , stands Shaftesbury or Thanot

House , built by Inigo Jones , formerly the residence of tho Tuftons , Earls of Thnnefc , ancl subsequently of Ashley Cooper , Earl of Shaftesbury , one of the famous Cabal Ministry of Charles II . ' s reign . Nearly opposite to it was Petro House , tho residence of tho Potro family in the Elizabethan days , and of Pierrcpoint , Marquis of Dorchester in the days of tho Commonwealth . It was also used as a State prison in

these latter clays , and subsequently as the temporary residence of the Bishops of London , when tho Great Fire had burnt them out of their house in St . Paul ' s Churchyard . Ib was to this house that tho Princess Anne , after she had deserted her father James II ., in 1688 , was brought by Bishop Comptou , in a hackney coach . At the northease corner , and not far from Shaftesbury-streot , stood Lauderdale

House , the mansion of the Earl of Lauderdale , another member of the Cabal Ministry , who was afterwards scut , in lG 60 , as Lord High Commissioner to tho Scottish Parliament , where he put down Conventicles , ancl was guilty of those cruelties which caused snch desperation , and led to the rebellion of tho Covenanters . Close by was Bacon House , the residence of Sir Nicholas Bacon , Lord Keeper in Queen Elizabeth's

time , and father ot tho immortal Francis Bacon . In this street lived tho warlike Earl of Peterborough , who in 1705 took Barcelona , and tho famous Duke of Montagu , father of the Duke of Montagu who in 1721 was Grand Master of Freemasons . Two doors from the Barbican stood once tho Bell Inn , " of a pretty good resort for wagons with meal , " whence the waterman-poet , John Taylor , temp . James I .,

set out on his pilgrimage to Scotland . Opposite St . Botolph ' s was the Cooks' Hall , which escaped tho Great Fire , but was destroyed by an insignificant conflagration in 1771 , since when tho Company , incorporated in 1180 , have transferred their business to tho Guildhall . Trinity-court , a little beyond the church , is so called from a brotherhood of the Holy Trinity , first founded in 1377 as a Fraternity

of St . Fabian and St . Sebastian , licensed by Henry VI ., and suppressed by Edward VI . The HaU was still standing iu 1700 . Another distinguished inhabitant of Aldersgate-street was Brian Walton , Bishop of Chester , who died there in 1 ( 561 . He was a man of great erudition , and in 1057 published the first English Polyglot Biblein Hebrew , Syriae , Chaklee , Samaritan , Arabic , Ethiopic , Persian ,

Greek , and the vulgar Latin languages . On tho west side of tho street stood tho London residence of the Nevilles , Earls of Westmoreland , still indicated by Westmoreland-bnildings , and near the sito of Bull and Mouth-street stood the mansion of tho Earls of Northumberland , whore dwelt among others tlie fiory Hotspur . Henry IV . gave it to his Queen Jane , aud ib was then known as her

Wardrobe . This was close to the Aldersgate itself . Io was iu her house in this street that , in 1621 , died Mary , Countess of Pembroke , the " Sydney ' s sister , Pembroke's mother , " immortalised by Bon Jonson in his noble epitaph . Where now is The Queen ' s Hotel , St . Martius-le-Grand , was the old Bnll ancl Mouth—corrupted from " Boulogne Month , " in allusion to tho siege of Boulogne by Henry VIII . It stocd

in Bull and Mouth-street , aud the south side , iu Angel-street , still retains the name , though only a luggiige depot of Chaplin and Home . A statuette of a Bull , with tlie arms of Edward VI . and Christ ' s Hospital above , and a tablet , probably taken from the old inn oolow , on the front of the Queen ' s Hotel , mark the ancient hostelry . The tablet bears fche following quaint inscription : —

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1878-09-07, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 6 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_07091878/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MEETING OF GRAND LODGE. Article 1
A STROLL IN BARBICAN AND ITS VICINITY. Article 2
QUARTERLY COMMUNICATION OF GRAND LODGE. Article 3
THE FOUR OLD LODGES. Article 4
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
SCRUTINEERS. Article 6
In Memoriam Article 7
CONSECRATON OF THE ELDON LODGE, Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
THE FALKLAND MEMORIAL. Article 9
ROYAL YORK LODGE. No 315 Article 10
NEW ZEALAND—NAPIER. Article 10
SOUTHERN CROSS LODGE 997, E.C. INSTALLATION OF BRO. W. B. SCANDRETT. Article 11
DIARY FOR, THE WEEK. Article 12
Untitled Article 13
JAMAICA. Article 14
THE INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF HYGIENE AT PARIS. Article 14
Untitled Ad 14
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 15
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Untitled Ad 16
Page 1

Page 1

2 Articles
Page 2

Page 2

2 Articles
Page 3

Page 3

2 Articles
Page 4

Page 4

2 Articles
Page 5

Page 5

2 Articles
Page 6

Page 6

4 Articles
Page 7

Page 7

4 Articles
Page 8

Page 8

7 Articles
Page 9

Page 9

3 Articles
Page 10

Page 10

3 Articles
Page 11

Page 11

3 Articles
Page 12

Page 12

2 Articles
Page 13

Page 13

3 Articles
Page 14

Page 14

4 Articles
Page 15

Page 15

15 Articles
Page 16

Page 16

17 Articles
Page 2

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Stroll In Barbican And Its Vicinity.

A STROLL IN BARBICAN AND ITS VICINITY .

THJJ GKOKGE TAVERX , AUSTRALIAN AVEXUK . EVEN those who can only carry their recollection of the City and its principal thoroughfares some twenty or five-andtwenty years back , can hardly repress a feeling of surprise at the changes which have been wrought in that brief period of time . Where wore close and stifling alleys , ill-bnilt ancl ill-paved streets , lined

on both sides with—for so wealthy and important a City as Londonvery ill-conditioned houses , there now will bo found broad and wollpaved thoroughfares , lined with blccks of buildings which certainly deserve the description of p-. ilatial . So rapidly aro these changes being made , that a few years hence thoso who can remember what the City was , say as recently as the year of tho Great Exhibition , will

hardly recognise it for tho same . True , it took a long time for tho worthy Londoners to bestir themselves , bnt tho Spirit of Improvement once aroused , has exerted itself most vigorously , till thero is a reasonable chance that little of the old streets and houses will remain mnch longer unimproved ; or , to pnfc the matter differently , what still remains of old London—not so very old either , it must be

remembered—will bo pulled down and rebuilt on a , grander and moro imposing scale . Perhaps , no neighbourhood has witnessed greater changes in this respect than that included in tho Ward of Cripplegate , and especially in those parts of it which verge on Aldersgate-street and tho Barbican . These and snch other familier names as Red Cross-street , White Cross-street , Jttwin-streot , & c , & c , remain , bnt ,

to use a common mode of expression , wero any of their former inhabitants to resume their mortal coil , and appear onco again amid the scenes of thoir busy livelihood , it is certain the } - would be unable to recognise tho streets and houses of to-day as those with which they were so familiar . And these changes which a fow years havo brought about , aro a sufficient reason for preserving some knowledge

of different City localities , as thoy were in former days . Even the most matter of fact and prosaic person must ; take some delight in hearing or reading of the people who lived where now thoy toil and strive to mako their fortnnes , and this feeling is likely to be tho stronger , the more considerable aro tho improvements which have been made . There is something more than mere sentiment—or ab all

events tho sentiment is highly creditable to those who indulge in itwhen peoplo recall that this great noble or statesman , that poet or soldier , passed a portion of his life in this qniet unpretending street , or , that now important and imposing thoroughfare . Most peoplo , indeed , delight in knowing something of tho place in whioh they dwell , and thero is perhaps no kind of literature so generally

popular as that which treats of tho former history of localities and districts . Thus little or no apology is needed fur the sketch wo have presently compiled . The Georrje , $ o ably administered by mine host , has no history of its own to boast of , but it is in the centre of a district which has , aud a very interesting record it is . A few years since , and Australian-avenue , iu

which it stands , was a mere blind alloy , with a not particularly attractive pawnbroker ' s shop at its entrance ; now thoro are on either side of it large and commanding premises , and the hostelry itself is by no moans tho least attractive building in the avenue . Nor is it tho least important ; for a well-conducted tavern , if not exactly " a thin " of beauty and a joy for ever , " is certainly , 1 most desirable place , and

likely to be frequented by sensible men of business at the inevitable hour of the day , when tho "inner man" asserts himself , ancl only a " grill" or" cut from the joint" will briug him to his senses again . But of this part of onr subject we shall speak anon . The time for a jniey steak has not yet come , ancl iu tho meantime , let ns take a turn in the neighbourhood , and see not only what ib is now , but trv and recal

something of its former history . The aveune is on tho sonth side of the Barbican , and nearest to where- that street meets Aldersgate-street . Hero afc once we have something to interest us . Barbican , according to Stow , and tho other London Antiquaries , derives its name from the " Burgh Kennin , " or " postern tower , " which stood ou the north side of the street

opposite to Redcross-street , and the remains of which were still in existence towards the end of last century . In this tower , Bagford tells ns , " tho Romans kept watch and ward at night that they might give notice of conflagrations or the approach of an enemy , ancl here on the top of the turret they lit bonfires to guide travellers to the City . " Iu Edward III . ' s reign it was entrusted to Robert UfTord , Earl

of Suffolk , and it remained in his family till the reign of Mary , when it was in the keeping of the Baroness Katherine Wiilonghby d'Eresby , a baroness in her own right , and widow of Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk , who lived in a siately mansion close by . This lady narrowly escaped being burnt at the stake for calling her lap-do . ? Gardiner , after the bishop of that name , and dressing him up in episcopal rochet

and surplice . For this she and her second husband , Richard Bertie , had to flee the country , and they sought refuge in Poland . Ou thssito of Bridgwater-sqimre stood the mansion of tho Enrls of Bridgwater . It was burnt down in 1 GS 7 , when Charles Viscount Bracklcy and his brother Thomas perished in the flames . Sir Thomas Spefman , author of tho " Glossaiinm , " died at his house in Barbican in

1640 . Beech . lane , according to Stow , was so named after Sir Nicholas de la Beech , lieutenant of tho Tower , who was deprived of his olliceby Edward III . An old house in Barbican , once belonging to the Abbot of uamsay , was called afterwards Drewrio House , from Sit Drew Drewrio , an owner thereof , and this was inhabited subsequently by the gallant old cavalier chief , Prince Rupert . To another house

tho great John Milton migrated from Aldorsgate-strcofc , remaining till 1 G 47 , when he went to live in High Holborn . In time , however , the street lost its gentility , and it is mentioned by Strype as inhabited chiffly by clothes-salesmen , while in his day ou the site of thj oli watch tower stood a watchhonse for the brawling mohocks of tho day . It was also along this street that the authorities of Cripplegate were

A Stroll In Barbican And Its Vicinity.

wont to go in procession when beating the parish bounds , and when thoy reached tho south-western end , they set np a post opposite to the Boar's Head , now known as the Brown Bear , and kept by that gonial ancl obliging host , Mr . Frederick Wykes , ancl then crossing to tho north side , proceeded np Goswell-road . It will farther interest members of tho great Masonic Fraternity

—and mine host of tho Georgo is a brother—to know thafc tho present Royal Alpha Lodge , No . 16 , met afc tho Red Cross , Barbican , during the years 173 ( 5-45 . It is also worthy of noto thafc in Edward I . ' s time tho Barbican was Crown property , for an Inquisition mado in tho third year of that monarch ' s reign , re Purprestnros in tho City , showed that some twelve years

before , one Thomas Juvenal had appropriated some ground without " le Earbchin , " and inclosed it with an earth wall , and it was held at the timo of the Inquisition by the Sheriffs by Master Nicholas Brabanzonne , who was summoned at command of the King ' s justices , and said ho had nothing to do with it , and laid no claim to the Purpresture , being tenant to Thomas Fitzsimon do Burgh . Aud the said

Thomas came , and prayed ho might arrent ifc afc threepence per annnm , which was granted , because the twelve sworn men swore the enclosure was no annoyance . It was further adjudged that tho King might recover the arrearages , to wifc , three shillings , but no forfeiture , because it was not tho said Thomas ' s doings . Between Whitecross-street and Golding-lane , stood fche Fortune ,

one of the earliest aud most important of the bllizabtitluiu theatres . Ifc was opened about 1 G 00 by Philip Heuslowo and Edward Alleyne , founder of Dulwich College , aud what till quite recently was an adjoining passage , but is now a broad street , still retains the namo of Playhouse-yard . In Golding-lane was tho Nursery , mentionod moro than onee by Pepys in his Diary , and also by Drydon ,

a seminary established in the reign of Charles II . for training children to tho profession of tho stage . Nor must wo forget mention of a certain building in Whitecross-street , which till quite a recent date was used as a Debtors' Prison , while it was in this street that Dr . Williams established his Free Library for Dissenting Ministers , now removed to Grafton-street , Fitzroy-sqnaro . Eedcross-sfcreet , so

called from tho Cross opposite Golden-lane , has associated with it one curious anecdote related by Sir Thomas More in his Life of Edward V ., in which he tells how that on the night after tho morning thafc Edward IV . died , a man called at the house of one Pettier , a servant of Richard Duke of Gloucester , who resided in the street , and Pettier , when he heard tho news , said , " Then will my master , the

Duke of Gloucester , be King , and that I warrant thee . And we know he did become King as Richard III . If we turn to Aldersgate-street wo shall find ample matter to satisfy our craving for historical associations . Wo have already mentioned that Milton lived here , until he moved to a house in Barbican . On tho east side of tho street , Nos . 35 to 33 , stands Shaftesbury or Thanot

House , built by Inigo Jones , formerly the residence of tho Tuftons , Earls of Thnnefc , ancl subsequently of Ashley Cooper , Earl of Shaftesbury , one of the famous Cabal Ministry of Charles II . ' s reign . Nearly opposite to it was Petro House , tho residence of tho Potro family in the Elizabethan days , and of Pierrcpoint , Marquis of Dorchester in the days of tho Commonwealth . It was also used as a State prison in

these latter clays , and subsequently as the temporary residence of the Bishops of London , when tho Great Fire had burnt them out of their house in St . Paul ' s Churchyard . Ib was to this house that tho Princess Anne , after she had deserted her father James II ., in 1688 , was brought by Bishop Comptou , in a hackney coach . At the northease corner , and not far from Shaftesbury-streot , stood Lauderdale

House , the mansion of the Earl of Lauderdale , another member of the Cabal Ministry , who was afterwards scut , in lG 60 , as Lord High Commissioner to tho Scottish Parliament , where he put down Conventicles , ancl was guilty of those cruelties which caused snch desperation , and led to the rebellion of tho Covenanters . Close by was Bacon House , the residence of Sir Nicholas Bacon , Lord Keeper in Queen Elizabeth's

time , and father ot tho immortal Francis Bacon . In this street lived tho warlike Earl of Peterborough , who in 1705 took Barcelona , and tho famous Duke of Montagu , father of the Duke of Montagu who in 1721 was Grand Master of Freemasons . Two doors from the Barbican stood once tho Bell Inn , " of a pretty good resort for wagons with meal , " whence the waterman-poet , John Taylor , temp . James I .,

set out on his pilgrimage to Scotland . Opposite St . Botolph ' s was the Cooks' Hall , which escaped tho Great Fire , but was destroyed by an insignificant conflagration in 1771 , since when tho Company , incorporated in 1180 , have transferred their business to tho Guildhall . Trinity-court , a little beyond the church , is so called from a brotherhood of the Holy Trinity , first founded in 1377 as a Fraternity

of St . Fabian and St . Sebastian , licensed by Henry VI ., and suppressed by Edward VI . The HaU was still standing iu 1700 . Another distinguished inhabitant of Aldersgate-street was Brian Walton , Bishop of Chester , who died there in 1 ( 561 . He was a man of great erudition , and in 1057 published the first English Polyglot Biblein Hebrew , Syriae , Chaklee , Samaritan , Arabic , Ethiopic , Persian ,

Greek , and the vulgar Latin languages . On tho west side of tho street stood tho London residence of the Nevilles , Earls of Westmoreland , still indicated by Westmoreland-bnildings , and near the sito of Bull and Mouth-street stood the mansion of tho Earls of Northumberland , whore dwelt among others tlie fiory Hotspur . Henry IV . gave it to his Queen Jane , aud ib was then known as her

Wardrobe . This was close to the Aldersgate itself . Io was iu her house in this street that , in 1621 , died Mary , Countess of Pembroke , the " Sydney ' s sister , Pembroke's mother , " immortalised by Bon Jonson in his noble epitaph . Where now is The Queen ' s Hotel , St . Martius-le-Grand , was the old Bnll ancl Mouth—corrupted from " Boulogne Month , " in allusion to tho siege of Boulogne by Henry VIII . It stocd

in Bull and Mouth-street , aud the south side , iu Angel-street , still retains the name , though only a luggiige depot of Chaplin and Home . A statuette of a Bull , with tlie arms of Edward VI . and Christ ' s Hospital above , and a tablet , probably taken from the old inn oolow , on the front of the Queen ' s Hotel , mark the ancient hostelry . The tablet bears fche following quaint inscription : —

  • Prev page
  • 1
  • You're on page2
  • 3
  • 16
  • Next page
  • Accredited Museum Designated Outstanding Collection
  • LIBRARY AND MUSEUM CHARITABLE TRUST OF THE UNITED GRAND LODGE OF ENGLAND REGISTERED CHARITY NUMBER 1058497 / ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2025

  • Accessibility statement

  • Designed, developed, and maintained by King's Digital Lab

We use cookies to track usage and preferences.

Privacy & cookie policy