Old and New London: Temple Bar

Temple Bar was rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren, in 1670–72..

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Article · * · ·
MARCH
26
2018
Temple Bar was rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren, in 1670–72.

Temple Bar was rebuilt by Sir Christopher Wren, in 1670–72, soon after the Great Fire had swept away eighty-nine London churches, four out of the seven City gates, 460 streets, and 13,200 houses, and had destroyed fifteen of the twenty-six wards, and laid waste 436 acres of buildings, from the Tower eastward to the Inner Temple westward.

The old black gateway, once the dreaded Golgotha of English traitors, separates, it should be remembered, the Strand from Fleet Street, the city from the shire, and the Freedom of the City of London from the Liberty of the City of Westminster. As Hatton (1708—Queen Anne) says,—”This gate opens not immediately into the City itself, but into the Liberty or Freedom thereof.” We need hardly say that nothing can be more erroneous than the ordinary London supposition that Temple Bar ever formed part of the City fortifications. Mr. Gilbert à Beckett, laughing at this tradition, once said in Punch: “Temple Bar has always seemed to me a weak point in the fortifications of London. Bless you, the besieging army would never stay to bombard it—they would dash through the barber’s.”

The Great Fire never reached nearer Temple Bar than the Inner Temple, on the south side of Fleet Steet, and St. Dunstan’s Church, on the north.

The Bar is of Portland stone, which London smoke alternately blackens and calcines; and each façade has four Corinthian pilasters, an entablature, and an arched pediment. On the west (Strand) side, in two niches, stand, as eternal sentries, Charles I. and Charles II., in Roman costume. Charles I. has long ago lost his bâton, as he once deliberately lost his head. Over the keystone of the central arch there used to be the royal arms. On the east side are James I. and Elizabeth (by many able writers supposed to be Anne of Denmark, James I.’s queen). She is pointing her white finger at Child’s; while he, looking down on the passing cabs, seems to say, “I am nearly tired of standing; suppose we go to Whitehall, and sit down a bit?”

The slab over the eastern side of the arch bears the following inscription, now all but smoothed down by time:—

“Erected in the year 1670, Sir Samuel Starling, Mayor; continued in the year 1671, Sir Richard Ford, Lord Mayor; and finished in the year, 1672, Sir George Waterman, Lord Mayor.”

All these persons were friends of Pepys.

The upper part of the Bar is flanked by scrolls, but the fruit and flowers once sculptured on the pediment, and the supporters of the royal arms over the posterns, have crumbled away. In the centre of each façade is a semicircular-headed, ecclesiastical-looking window, that casts a dim horny light into a room above the gate, held of the City, at an annual rent of some £50, by Messrs. Childs, the bankers, as a sort of muniment-room for their old account-books. There is here preserved, among other costlier treasures of Mammon, the private account-book of Charles II. The original Child was a friend of Pepys, and is mentioned by him as quarrelling with the Duke of York on Admiralty matters. The Child who succeeded him was a friend of Pope, and all but led him into the South-Sea Bubble speculation.

Those affected, mean statues, with the crinkly drapery, were the work of a vain, half-crazed sculptor named John Bushnell, who died mad in 1701. Bushnell, who had visited Rome and Venice, executed Cowley’s monument in Westminster Abbey, and the statues of Charles I., Charles II., and Gresham, in the Old Exchange.

There is no extant historical account of Temple Bar in which the following passage from Strype (George I.) is not to be found embedded like a fossil; it is, in fact, nearly all we London topographers know of the early history of the Bar:— “Anciently,” says Strype, “there were only posts, rails, and a chain, such as are now in Holborn, Smithfield, and Whitechapel bars. Afterwards there was a house of timber erected across the street, with a narrow gateway and an entry on the south side of it under the house.” This structure is to be seen in the bird’s-eye view of London, 1601 (Elizabeth), and in Hollar’s seven-sheet map of London (Charles II.)

The date of the erection of the “wooden house” is not to be ascertained; but there is the house plain enough in a view of London to which Maitland affixes the date about 1560 (the second year of Elizabeth), so we may perhaps safely put it down as early as Edward VI. or Henry VIII. Indeed, if a certain scrap of history is correct—i.e., that bluff King Hal once threatened, if a certain Bill did not pass the Commons a little quicker, to fix the heads of several refractory M.P.s on the top of Temple Bar—we must suppose the old City toll-gate to be as old as the early Tudors.

After Simon de Montfort’s death, at the battle of Evesham, 1265, Prince Edward, afterwards Edward I., punished the rebellious Londoners, who had befriended Montfort, by taking away all their street chains and bars, and locking them up in the Tower.

The earliest known documentary and historical notice of Temple Bar is in 1327, the first year of Edward III.; and in the thirty-fourth year of the same reign we find, at an inquisition before the mayor, twelve witnesses deposing that the commonalty of the City had, time out of mind, had free ingress and egress from the City to Thames and from Thames to the City, through the great gate of the Templars situate within Temple Bar. This referred to some dispute about the right of way through the Temple, built in the reign of Henry I. In 1384 Richard II. granted a licence for paving Strand Street from Temple Bar to the Savoy, and collecting tolls to cover such charges.

The historical pageants that have taken place at Temple Bar deserve a notice, however short. On the 5th of November, 1422, the corpse of that brave and chivalrous king, the hero of Agincourt, Henry V., was borne to its rest at Westminster Abbey by the chief citizens and nobles, and every doorway from Southwark to Temple Bar had its mournful torch-bearer. In 1502–3 the hearse of Elizabeth of York, queen of Henry VII., halted at Temple Bar, on its way from the Tower to Westminster, and at the Bar the Abbots of Westminster and Bermondsey blessed the corpse, and the Earl of Derby and a large company of nobles joined the sable funeral throng. After sorrow came joy, and after joy sorrow—Ita vita. In the next reign poor Anne Boleyn, radiant with happiness and triumph, came through the Bar (May 31, 1534), on her way to the Tower, to be welcomed by the clamorous citizens, the day before her ill-starred coronation. Temple Bar on that occasion was new painted and repaired, and near it stood singing men and children—the Fleet Street conduit all the time running claret. The old gate figures more conspicuously the day before the coronation of that wondrous child, Edward VI. Two hogsheads of wine were then ladled out to the thirsty mob, and the gate at Temple Bar was painted with battlements and buttresses, richly hung with cloth of Arras, and all in a flutter with “fourteen standard flags.” There were eight French trumpeters blowing their best, besides “a pair of regals,” with children singing to the same. In September, 1553, when Edward’s cold-hearted half-sister, Mary Tudor, came through the City, according to ancient English custom, the day before her coronation, she did not ride on horseback, as Edward had done, but sat in a chariot covered with cloth of tissue and drawn by six horses draped with the same. Minstrels piped and trumpeted at Ludgate, and Temple Bar was newly painted and hung.

Old Temple Bar, the background to many historical scenes, figures in the rash rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyatt. When he had fought his way down Piccadilly to the Strand, Temple Bar was thrown open to him, or forced open by him; but when he had been repulsed at Ludgate he was hemmed in by cavalry at Temple Bar, where he surrendered. This foolish revolt led to the death of innocent Lady Jane Grey, and brought sixty brave gentlemen to the scaffold and the gallows.

On Elizabeth’s procession from the Tower before her coronation, January, 1559, Gogmagog the Albion, and Corineus the Briton, the two Guildhall giants, stood on the Bar; and on the south side there were chorister lads, one of whom, richly attired as a page, bade the queen farewell in the name of the whole City. In 1588, the glorious year that the Armada was defeated, Elizabeth passed through the Bar on her way to return thanks to God solemnly at St. Paul’s. The City waits stood in triumph on the roof of the gate. The Lord Mayor and Aldermen, in scarlet gowns, welcomed the queen and delivered up the City sword, then on her return they took horse and rode before her. The City Companies lined the north side of the street, the lawyers and gentlemen of the Inns of Court the south. Among the latter stood a person afterwards not altogether unknown, one Francis Bacon, who displayed his wit by saying to a friend, “Mark the courtiers! Those who bow first to the citizens are in debt; those who bow first to us are at law!”

In 1601, when the Earl of Essex made his insane attempt to rouse the City to rebellion, Temple Bar, we are told, was thrown open to him; but Ludgate being closed against him on his retreat from Cheapside, he came back by boat to Essex House, where he surrendered after a short and useless resistance.

King James made his first public entry into his royal City of London, with his consort and son Henry, upon the 15th of March, 1603–4. The king was mounted upon a white genet, ambling through the crowded streets under a canopy held by eight gentlemen of the Privy Chamber, as representatives of the Barons of the Cinque Ports, and passed under six arches of triumph, to take his leave at the Temple of Janus, erected for the occasion at Temple Bar. This edifice was fiftyseven feet high, proportioned in every respect like a temple.

In June, 1649 (the year of the execution of Charles), Cromwell and the Parliament dined at Guildhall in state, and the mayor, says Whitelocke, delivered up the sword to the Speaker, at Temple Bar, as he had before done to King Charles.

Philips, Milton’s nephew, who wrote the continuation of Baker’s Chronicle, describes the ceremony at Temple Bar on the proclamation of Charles II. The old oak gates being shut, the king-at-arms, with tabard on and trumpet before him, knocked and gravely demanded entrance. The Lord Mayor appointed some one to ask who knocked. The king-at-arms replied, that if they would open the wicket, and let the Lord Mayor come thither, he would to him deliver his message. The Lord Mayor then appeared, tremendous in crimson velvet gown, and on horseback, of all things in the world, the trumpets sounding as the gallant knight pricked forth to demand of the herald, who he was and what was his message. The bold herald, with his hat on, answered, regardless of Lindley Murray, who was yet unknown, “We are the herald-at-arms appointed and commanded by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, and demand an entrance into the famous City of London, to proclaim Charles II. King of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland, and we expect your speedy answer to our demand.” An alderman then replied, “The message is accepted,” and the gates were thrown open.

When William III. came to see the City and the Lord Mayor’s Show in 1689, the City militia, holding lighted flambeaux, lined Fleet Street as far as Temple Bar.

The shadow of every monarch and popular hero since Charles II.’s time has rested for at least a passing moment at the old gateway. Queen Anne passed here to return thanks at St. Paul’s for the victory of Blenheim. Here Marlborough’s coach ominously broke down in 1714, when he returned in triumph from his voluntary exile.

George III. passed through Temple Bar, young and happy, the year after his coronation, and again when, old and almost broken-hearted, he returned thanks for his partial recovery from insanity; and in our time that graceless son of his, the Prince Regent, came through the Bar in 1814, to thank God at St. Paul’s for the downfall of Bonaparte.

On the 9th November, 1837, the accession of Queen Victoria, Sir Peter Laurie, picturesque in scarlet gown, Spanish hat, and black feathers, presented the City sword to the Queen at Temple Bar; Sir Peter was again ready with the same weapon in 1844, when the Queen opened the new Royal Exchange; but in 1851, when her Majesty once more visited the City, the old ceremony was (wrongly, we think) dispensed with.

At the funeral of Lord Nelson, the honoured corpse, followed by downcast old sailors, was met at the Bar by the Lord Mayor and the Corporation; and the Great Duke’s funeral car, and the long train of representative soldiers, rested at the Bar, which was hung with black velvet.

A few earlier associations connected with the present Bar deserve a moment or two’s recollection. On February 12th, when General Monk—”Honest George,” as his old Cromwellian soldiers used to call him—entered London, dislodged the “Rump” Parliament, and prepared for the Restoration of Charles II., bonfires were lit, the City bells rung, and London broke into a sudden flame of joy. Pepys, walking homeward about ten o’clock, says:— “The common joy was everywhere to be seen. The number of bonfires—there being fourteen between St. Dunstan’s and Temple Bar, and at Strand Bridge, east of Catherine Street, I could at one time tell thirty-one fires.”

On November 17, 1679, the year after the sham Popish Plot concocted by those matchless scoundrels, Titus Oates, an expelled naval. chaplain, and Bedloe; a swindler and thief, Temple Bar was made the spot for a great mob pilgrimage, on the anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth, The ceremonial is supposed to have been organised by that restless plotter against a Popish succession, Lord Shaftesbury, and the gentlemen of the Green Ribbon Club, whose tavern, the “King’s Head,” was at the corner of Chancery Lane, opposite the Inner Temple gate. To scare and vex the Papists, the church bells began to clash out as early as three o’clock on the morning of that dangerous day. At dusk the procession of several thousand half-crazed torch-bearers started from Moorgate, along Bishopsgate Street, and down Houndsditch and Aldgate (passing Shaftesbury’s house imagine the roar of the monster mob, the wave of torches, and the fiery fountains of squibs at that point!), then through Leadenhall Street and Cornhill, by the Royal Exchange, along Cheapside and on to Temple Bar, where the bonfire awaited the puppets. In a torrent of fire the noisy Protestants passed through the exulting City, making the Papists cower and shudder in their garrets and cellars, and before the flaming deluge opened a storm of shouting people. This procession consisted of fifteen groups of priests, Jesuits, and friars, two following a man on a horse, holding up before him a dummy, dressed to represent Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, a Protestant justice and wood merchant, supposed to have been murdered by Roman Catholics at Somerset House. It was attended by a body-guard of 150 swordbearers and a man roaring a political cry of the time through a brazen speaking-trumpet. The great bonfire was built up mountain high opposite the Inner Temple gate. Some zealous Protestants, by pre-arrangement, had crowned the prim and meagre statue of Elizabeth (still on the east side of the Bar) with a wreath of gilt laurel, and placed under her hand (that now points to Child’s Bank) a golden glistening shield, with the motto, “The Protestant Religion and Magna Charta,” inscribed upon it. Several lighted torches were stuck before her niche. Lastly, amidst a fiery shower of squibs from every door and window, the Pope and his companions were toppled into the huge bonfire, with shouts that reached almost to Charing Cross.

These mischievous processions were continued till the reign of George I. There was to have been a magnificent one on November 17, 1711, when the Whigs were dreading the contemplated peace with the French and the return of Marlborough. But the Tories, declaring that the Kit-Cat Club was urging the mob to destroy the house of Harley, the Minister, and to tear him to pieces, seized on the wax figures in Drury Lane, and forbade the ceremony.

As early as two years after the Restoration, Sir Balthazar Gerbier, a restless architectural quack and adventurer of those days, wrote a pamphlet proposing a sumptuous gate at Temple Bar, and the levelling of the Fleet Valley. After the Great Fire Charles II. himself hurried the erection of the Bar, and promised money to carry out the work. During the Great Fire, Temple Bar was one of the stations for constables, 100 firemen, and 30 soldiers.

The Rye-House Plot brought the first trophy to the Golgotha of the Bar, in 1684, twelve years after its erection. Sir Thomas Armstrong was deep in the scheme. If the discreditable witnesses examined against Lord William Russell are to be believed, a plot had been concocted by a few desperate men to assassinate “the Blackbird and the Goldfinch “—as the conspirators called the King and the Duke of York—as they were in their coach on their way from Newmarket to London. This plan seems to have been the suggestion of Rumbold, a maltster, who lived in a lonely moated farmhouse, called Rye House, about eighteen miles from London, near the river Ware, close to a by-road that leads from Bishop Stortford to Hoddesdon. Charles II. had a violent hatred to Armstrong, who had been his Gentleman of the Horse, and was supposed to have incited his illegitimate son, the Duke of Monmouth, to rebellion. Sir Thomas was hanged at Tyburn. After the body had hung half an hour, the hangman cut it down, stripped it, lopped off the head, threw the heart into a fire, and divided, the body into four parts. The fore-quarter (afterbeing boiled in pitch at Newgate) was set on Temple Bar, the head was placed on Westminster Hall, and the rest of the body was sent to Stafford, which town Sir Thomas represented in Parliament.

Eleven years after, the heads of two more traitors —this time conspirators against William III.— joined the relic of Armstrong. Sir John Friend was a rich brewer at Aldgate. Parkyns was an old Warwickshire county gentleman. The plotters had several plans. One was to attack Kensington Palace at night, scale the outer wall, and storm or fire the building; another was to kill William on a Sunday, as he drove from Kensington to the chapel at St. James’s Palace. The murderers agreed to assemble near where Apsley House now standsJust as the royal coach passed from Hyde Park across to the Green Park, thirty conspirators agreed to fall on the twenty-five guards, and butcher the king before he could leap out of his carriageThese two Jacobite gentlemen died bravely, proclaiming their entire loyalty to King James and the “Prince of Wales.”

The unfortunate gentlemen who took a moody pleasure in drinking “the squeezing of the rotten Orange” had long passed on their doleful journey from Newgate to Tyburn before the ghastly procession of the brave and unlucky men of the rising, in 1715 began its mournful march.

Sir Bernard Burke mentions a tradition that the head of the young Earl of Derwentwater was exposed on Temple Bar in 1716, and that his wife drove in a cart under the arch while a man hired, for the purpose threw down to her the beloved head from the parapet above. But the story is entirely untrue, and is only a version of the way in which the head of Sir Thomas More was removed by his son-in-law and daughter from London Bridge, where that cruel tyrant Henry VIII. had placed it. Some years ago, when the Earl of Derwentwater’s coffin was found in the family vault, the head was lying safe with the body. In 1716 there was, however, a traitor’s head spiked on the Bar—that of Colonel John Oxburgh, the victim of mistaken fidelity to a bad cause. He was a brave Lancashire gentleman, who had surrendered with his forces at Preston. He displayed signal courage and resignation in prison, forgetting himself to comfort others.

The next victim was Mr. Christopher Layer, a young Norfolk man and a Jacobite barrister, living in Southampton Buildings, Chancery Lane. He plunged deeply into the Atterbury Plot of 1722, and, with Lords North and Grey, enlisted men, hired officers, and, taking advantage of the universal misery caused by the bursting ‘of the South Sea Bubble, planned a general rising against George I. The scheme was, with four distinct bodies of Jacobites, to seize the Tower and the Bank, to arrest the king and the prince, and capture or kill Lord Cadogan, one of the Ministers. At the trial it was proved that Layer had been over to Rome, and had seen the Pretender, who, by proxy, had stood godfather to his child. Troops were to be sent from France; barricades were to be thrown up all over London. The Jacobites had calculated that the Government had only 14,000 men to meet them— 3,000 of these would be wanted to guard London, 3,000 for Scotland, and 2,000 for the garrisons. The original design had been to take advantage of the king’s departure for Hanover, and, in the words of one of the conspirators, the Jacobites were fully convinced that “they should walk King George out before Lady-day.” Layer was hanged at Tyburn, and his head fixed upon Temple Bar.

Years after, one stormy night in 1753, the rebel’s skull blew down, and was picked up by a nonjuring attorney, named Pierce, who preserved it as a relic of the Jacobite martyr. It is said that Dr. Richard Rawlinson, an eminent antiquary, obtained what he thought was Layer’s head, and desired in his will that it should be placed in his right hand when he was buried. Another version of the story is, that a spurious skull was foisted upon Rawlinson, who died happy in the possession of the doubtful treasure. Rawlinson was bantered by Addison for his pedantry, in one of the Tatlers, and was praised by Dr. Johnson for his learning.

The 1745 rebellion brought the heads of fresh victims to the Bar, and this was the last triumph of barbarous justice. Colonel Francis Townley’s was the sixth head; Fletcher’s (his fellow-officer), the seventh and last. The Earls of Kilmarnock and Cromarty, Lord Balmerino, and thirty-seven other rebels (thirty-six of them having been captured in Carlisle) were tried the same session. Townley was a man of about fifty-four years of age, nephew of Mr. Townley of Townley Hall, in Lancashire (the “Townley Marbles” family), who had been tried and acquitted in 1725, though many of his men were found guilty and executed. The nephew had gone over to France in 1727, and obtained a commission from the French king, whom he served for fifteen years, being at the siege of Philipsburg, and close to the Duke of Berwick when that general’s head was shot off. About 1740, Townley stole over to, England to see his friends and to plot against the Hanover family; and as soon as the rebels came into England, he met them between Lancaster and Preston, and came with them to Manchester. At the trial Roger M’Donald, an officer’s servant, deposed to seeing Townley on the retreat from Derby, and between Lancaster and Preston riding at the head of the Manchester regiment on a bay horse. He had a white cockade in his hat and wore a plaid sash.

George Fletcher, who was tried at the same time as Townley, was a rash young chapman, who managed his widowed mother’s provision shop “at Salford, just over the bridge in Manchester.” His mother had begged him on her knees to keep out of the rebellion, even offering him a thousand pounds for his own pocket, if he would stay at home. He bought a captain’s commission of Murray, the Pretender’s secretary, for fifty pounds; wore the smart white cockade and a Highland plaid sash lined with white silk; and headed the very first captain’s guard mounted for the Pretender at Carlisle. A Manchester man deposed to seeing at the Exchange a sergeant, with a drum, beating up for volunteers for the Manchester regiment.

Fletcher, Townley, and seven other unfortunate Jacobites were hanged on Kennington Common. Before the carts drove away, the men flung their prayer-books, written speeches, and gold-laced hats gaily to the crowd. Mr. James (Jemmy) Dawson, the hero of Shenstone’s touching ballad, was one of the nine. As soon as they were dead the hangman cut down the bodies, disembowelled, beheaded, and quartered them, throwing the hearts into the fire. A monster—a fighting-man of the day, named Buckhorse—is said to have actually eaten a piece of Townley’s flesh, to show his loyalty. Before the ghastly scene was over, the heart of one unhappy spectator had already broken. The lady to whom James Dawson was engaged to be married followed the rebels to the common, and even came near enough to see, with pallid face, the fire kindling, the axe, the coffins, and all the other dreadful preparations. She bore up bravely, until she heard her lover was no more. Then she drew her head back into the coach, and crying out, “My dear, I follow thee—I follow thee! Lord God, receive our souls, I pray Thee!” fell on the neck of a companion and expired. Mr. Dawson had behaved gallantly in prison, saying, “He did not care if they put a ton weight of iron upon him, it would not daunt him.”

A curious old print of 1746, full of vulgar triumph, reproduces a “Temple Bar, the City Golgotha,” representing the Bar with three heads on the top of it, spiked on long iron rods. The devil looks down in ribald triumph from above, and waves a rebel banner, on which, besides three coffins and a crown, is the motto, “A crown or a grave.” Underneath are written these patriotic but doggrel lines:—

“Observe the banner which would all enslave,
Which misled traytors did so proudly wave;
The devil seems the project to surprise;
A fiend confused from off the trophy flies.
While trembling rebels at the fabric gaze,
And dread their fate with horror and amaze,
Let Britain’s sons the emblematic view,
And plainly see what is rebellion’s due.”

The heads of Fletcher and Townley were put on the Bar August 12, 1746. On August 15th Horace Walpole, writing to a friend, says he had just been roaming in the City, and “passed under the new heads on Temple Bar, where people make a trade of letting spy-glasses at a halfpenny a look.” According to Mr. J. T. Smith, an old man living in 1825 remembered, the last heads on Temple Bar being visible through a telescope across the space between the Bar and Leicester Fields.

Between two and three A.M., on the morning of January 20, 1766, a mysterious man was arrested by the watch as he was discharging, by the dim light, musket bullets at the two heads then remaining upon Temple Bar. On being questioned by the puzzled magistrate, he affected a disorder in his senses, and craftily declared that the patriotic reason for his eccentric conduct was his strong attachment to the present Government, and that he thought it not sufficient that a traitor should merely suffer death; that this provoked his indignation, and it had been his constant practice for three nights past to amuse himself in the same manner. “And it is much to be feared,” says the past record of the event, “that the man is a near relation to one of the unhappy sufferers.” Upon searching this very suspicious marksman, about fifty musket bullets were found on him, wrapped up in a paper on which was written the motto, “Eripuit ille vitam.”

After this, history leaves the heads of the unhappy Jacobites — those lips that love had kissed, those: cheeks children had patted—to moulder on in the sun and in the rain, till the last day of March, 1772,. when one of them (Townley or Fletcher) fell. The last stormy gust of March threw it down, and a short time after a strong wind blew down the other; and against the sky no more relics remained of a barbarous and unchristian revenge. In April, 1773, Boswell, whom we all despise and all like,. dined at courtly Mr. Beauclerk’s with Dr. Johnson, Lord Charlemont (Hogarth’s friend), Sir Joshua Reynolds, and other members of the literaryclub, in Gerrard Street, Soho, it being the awful evening when Boswell was to be balloted forThe conversation turned on the new and commendable practice of erecting monuments to great men in St. Paul’s. The Doctor observed: “I remember once being with Goldsmith in Westminster Abbey. Whilst we stood at Poet’s Corner, I said to him,—

“Forsitan et nostrum nomen miscebitur istis.”—Ovid.
When we got to Temple Bar he stopped me, and pointing to the heads upon it, slily whispered,—
“Forsitan et nostrum nomen miscebitur istis.”

This anecdote, so full of clever, arch wit, is sufficient to endear the old gateway to all lovers of Johnson and of Goldsmith.

According to Mr. Timbs, in his “London and Westminster,” Mrs. Black, the wife of the editor of the Morning Chronicle, when asked if she remembered any heads on Temple Bar, used to reply, in her brusque, hearty way, “Boys, I recollect the scene well! I have seen on that Temple Bar, about which you ask, two human heads—real heads— traitors’ heads—spiked on iron poles. There were two; I saw one fall (March 31, 1772). Women shrieked as it fell; men, as I have heard, shrieked. One woman near me fainted. Yes, boys, I recollect seeing human heads upon Temple Bar.”

The cruel-looking spikes were removed early in the present century. The panelled oak gates have often been renewed, though certainly shutting them too often never wore them out.

As early as 1790 Alderman Pickett (who built the St. Clement’s arch), with other subversive reformers, tried to pull down Temple Bar. It was pronounced unworthy of form, of no antiquity, an ambuscade for pickpockets, and a record of only the dark and crimson pages of history.

A writer in the Gentleman’s Magazine, in 1813; chronicling the clearance away of some hovels encroaching upon the building, says: “It will not be surprising if certain amateurs, busy in improving the architectural concerns of the City, should at length request of their brethren to allow the Bar or grand gate of entrance into the City of London to stand, after they have so repeatedly sought to obtain its destruction.” In 1852 a proposal for its repair and restoration was defeated in the Common Council; and twelve months later, a number of bankers, merchants, and traders set their hands to a petition for its removal altogether, as serving no practical purpose, as it impeded ventilation and retarded improvements. Since then Mr. Heywood has proposed to make a circus at Temple Bar, leaving the archway in the centre; and Mr. W. Burges, the architect, suggested a new arch in keeping with the new Law Courts opposite.

It is a singular fact that the “Parentalia,” a chronicle of Wren’s works written by Wren’s clever son, contains hardly anything about Temple Bar. According to Mr Noble, the Wren manuscripts in the British Museum, Wren’s ledger in the Bodleian, and the Record Office documents, are equally silent; but from a folio at the Guildhall, entitled “Expenses of Public Buildings after the Great Fire,” it would appear that the Bar cost altogether £1,397 10s.; Bushnell, the sculptor, receiving out of this sum £480 for his four stone monarchs. The mason was John Marshall, who carved the pedestal of the statue of Charles I. at Charing Cross and worked on the Monument in Fish Street Hill. In 1636 Inigo Jones had designed a new arch, the plan of which still exists. Wren, it is said, took his design of the Bar from an old temple at Rome.

The old Bar is now a mere piece of useless and disused armour. Once a protection, then an ornament, it has now become an obstruction—the too narrow neck of a large decanter—a bone in the throat of Fleet Street. Yet still we have a lingering fondness for the old barrier that we have seen draped in black for a dead hero and glittering with gold in honour of a young bride. We have shared the sunshine that brightened it and the gloom that has darkened it, and we feel for it a species of friendship, in which it mutely shares. To us there seems to be a dignity in its dirt and pathos in the mud that bespatters its patient old face, as, like a sturdy fortress, it holds out against all its enemies, and Charles I. and II., and Elizabeth and James I. keep a bright look-out day and night for all attacks. Nevertheless, it must go in time, we fear. Poor old Temple Bar, we shall miss you when you are gone!


Citation information: Old and New London: Volume 1 – The Underground Map
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Wendy    
Added: 22 Mar 2024 15:33 GMT   

Polygon Buildings
Following the demolition of the Polygon, and prior to the construction of Oakshott Court in 1974, 4 tenement type blocks of flats were built on the site at Clarendon Sq/Phoenix Rd called Polygon Buildings. These were primarily for people working for the Midland Railway and subsequently British Rail. My family lived for 5 years in Block C in the 1950s. It seems that very few photos exist of these buildings.

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Steve   
Added: 19 Mar 2024 08:42 GMT   

Road construction and houses completed
New Charleville Circus road layout shown on Stanford’s Library Map Of London And Its Suburbs 1879 with access via West Hill only.

Plans showing street numbering were recorded in 1888 so we can concluded the houses in Charleville Circus were built by this date.

Source: Charleville Circus, Sydenham, London

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Steve   
Added: 19 Mar 2024 08:04 GMT   

Charleville Circus, Sydenham: One Place Study (OPS)
One Place Study’s (OPS) are a recent innovation to research and record historical facts/events/people focused on a single place �’ building, street, town etc.

I have created an open access OPS of Charleville Circus on WikiTree that has over a million members across the globe working on a single family tree for everyone to enjoy, for free, forever.

Source: Charleville Circus, Sydenham, London

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Charles   
Added: 8 Mar 2024 20:45 GMT   

My House
I want to know who lived in my house in the 1860’s.

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NH   
Added: 7 Mar 2024 11:41 GMT   

Telephone House
Donald Hunter House, formerly Telephone House, was the BT Offices closed in 2000

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Paul Cox   
Added: 5 Mar 2024 22:18 GMT   

War damage reinstatement plans of No’s 11 & 13 Aldine Street
Whilst clearing my elderly Mothers house of general detritus, I’ve come across original plans (one on acetate) of No’s 11 & 13 Aldine Street. Might they be of interest or should I just dispose of them? There are 4 copies seemingly from the one single acetate example. Seems a shame to just junk them as the level of detail is exquisite. No worries if of no interest, but thought I’d put it out there.

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Diana   
Added: 28 Feb 2024 13:52 GMT   

New Inn Yard, E1
My great grandparents x 6 lived in New Inn Yard. On this date, their son was baptised in nearby St Leonard’s Church, Shoreditch

Source: BDM London, Cripplegate and Shoreditch registers written by church clerk.

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Vic Stanley   
Added: 24 Feb 2024 17:38 GMT   

Postcose
The postcode is SE15, NOT SE1

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NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
All Hallows Bread Street All Hallows Bread Street was a parish church in the Bread Street ward of the City of London.
All Hallows Bread Street
All Hallows, Honey Lane All Hallows, Honey Lane was parish church in the City of London.
All Hallows, Honey Lane
Bank of England The Bank of England is the central bank of the United Kingdom.
Bank of England
Hospital of St Thomas of Acre The Hospital of St Thomas of Acre was the medieval London headquarters of the Knights of Saint Thomas.
Hospital of St Thomas of Acre
Mermaid Tavern The Mermaid Tavern was a notable tavern during the Elizabethan era.
Mermaid Tavern
St Augustine Watling Street St Augustine, Watling Street was an Anglican church which stood just to the east of St Paul’s Cathedral.
St Augustine Watling Street
St Benet Sherehog St Benet Sherehog was a medieval parish church built before the year 1111 in Cordwainer Ward, in what was then the wool-dealing district.
St Benet Sherehog
St Martin Pomary St Martin Pomeroy was a parish church in the Cheap ward of the City of London.
St Martin Pomary
St Mary Aldermary The Guild Church of St Mary Aldermary is an Anglican church located in Watling Street at the junction with Bow Lane, in the City of London.
St Mary Aldermary
St Mary Colechurch St Mary Colechurch was a parish church in the City of London destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and not rebuilt.
St Mary Colechurch
St Mary-le-Bow St Mary-le-Bow is an historic church rebuilt after the Great Fire of 1666 by Sir Christopher Wren. According to tradition a true Cockney must be born within earshot of the sound of Bow Bells.
St Mary-le-Bow
St Matthew Friday Street St. Matthew Friday Street was a church in the City of London located on Friday Street, off Cheapside.
St Matthew Friday Street
St Michael-le-Querne St Michael-le-Querne, also called St Michael ad Bladum, was a parish church in the Farringdon Within Ward in the City of London.
St Michael-le-Querne
St Mildred, Bread Street The church of St Mildred, Bread Street, stood on the east side of Bread Street in the Bread Street Ward of the City of London.
St Mildred, Bread Street
St Nicholas Cole Abbey St. Nicholas Cole Abbey is a church in the City of London located on what is now Queen Victoria Street.
St Nicholas Cole Abbey
St Peter, Westcheap St Peter, Westcheap, sometimes known simply as ’St Peter Cheap’, was a parish church in the City of London.
St Peter, Westcheap
St. Mary Magdalen, Milk Street St. Mary Magdalen, Milk Street, was a parish church in the City of London, England. It was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and not rebuilt.
St. Mary Magdalen, Milk Street

NEARBY STREETS
100 Bishopsgate, EC2M 100 Bishopsgate is a development of two mixed-use buildings on Bishopsgate in London. (City of London)
100 Bishopsgate, EC2M
20 Fenchurch Street, EC3M 20 Fenchurch Street is a commercial skyscraper in the City of London. (City of London)
20 Fenchurch Street, EC3M
99 Bishopsgate, EC2N 99 Bishopsgate is a commercial skyscraper located on Bishopsgate, a major thoroughfare in the City of London financial district. (City of London)
99 Bishopsgate, EC2N
Abchurch Lane, EC4N Abchurch Lane was first mentioned as Abbechurche Lane in 1291 (City of London)
Abchurch Lane, EC4N
Abchurch Yard, EC4N First mentioned in 1732, Abchurch Yard was built on the St Mary Abchurch churchyard (City of London)
Abchurch Yard, EC4N
Acorn Street, EC2M Acorn Street, Bishopsgate, was named from an old tavern sign. (City of London)
Acorn Street, EC2M
Adams Court, EC2R Adam’s Court is thought to be named for Sir Thomas Adams (City of London)
Adams Court, EC2R
Addle Hill, EC4V Addle Hill, formerly Addle Street, originally ran from Upper Thames Street from Carter Lane. (City of London)
Addle Hill, EC4V
Addle Street, EC2V Addle Street, there from ancient times, was a victim of the bulldozer after the Second World War (City of London)
Addle Street, EC2V
Adelaide House, EC3R Adelaide House is a Grade II listed Art Deco office building in the City of London. (City of London)
Adelaide House, EC3R
AIG Building, EC3M AIG Building is sited on Fenchurch Street (City of London)
AIG Building, EC3M
Albion Courtyard, EC1A Albion Courtyard is one of the streets of London in the EC1M postal area (City of London)
Albion Courtyard, EC1A
Albion Way, EC1A Albion Way is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Albion Way, EC1A
Alder Castle House, EC2V Alder Castle House can be found on Noble Street (City of London)
Alder Castle House, EC2V
Aldermanbury Square, EC2V At the centre of Saxon London, the aldermen (elder statesmen of City wards) met in a ’bury’ (house) in a time before the Guildhall was built (City of London)
Aldermanbury Square, EC2V
Aldermanbury, EC2V Aldermanbury is the Saxon name for ’Eldermen’ (elder statesmen) and ’bury’ (house) (City of London)
Aldermanbury, EC2V
Aldermary House, EC4N Aldermary House is a block on Queen Street (City of London)
Aldermary House, EC4N
Alders Court, EC1Y Ball Court, EC1 was renamed as Alders Court, EC1 in 1936 (City of London)
Alders Court, EC1Y
Aldgate Square, EC3N Aldgate Square is a location in London (City of London)
Aldgate Square, EC3N
Aldgate, EC3N Aldgate was the easternmost gateway through the London Wall leading from the City of London to Whitechapel and the East End (City of London)
Aldgate, EC3N
All Hallows Court, EC3M All Hallows Court ran on the northern side of All Hallows Lombard Street church (City of London)
All Hallows Court, EC3M
Allhallows Lane, EC4R Allhallows Lane is named after the churches of All-Hallows-the-Great and Less (City of London)
Allhallows Lane, EC4R
Allianz House, EC3V Allianz House is a block on St Benet’s Place (City of London)
Allianz House, EC3V
Alto House, EC1A Alto House is located on Newbury Street (City of London)
Alto House, EC1A
Amen Corner, EC4M Originally called Amen Lane, this short path forms the approach road to Amen Court. (City of London)
Amen Corner, EC4M
Amen Court, EC4M Many of the highways and byways around the precincts of St Paul’s Cathedral bear names which have ecclesiastical origins. (City of London)
Amen Court, EC4M
Andrews Crosse, EC4A Andrews Crosse stood on the site of the courtyard of the former Andrews Crosse Inn (City of London)
Andrews Crosse, EC4A
Angel Court Tower, EC2R Angel Court Tower is a block on Angel Court (City of London)
Angel Court Tower, EC2R
Angel Court, EC2R Angel Court is named after a long demolished inn of this name (City of London)
Angel Court, EC2R
Angel Lane, EC4R Angel Lane was formerly Angel Passage (City of London)
Angel Lane, EC4R
Angel Street, EC1A Angel Street runs between King Edward Street in the west and St Martin’s Le Grand in the east (City of London)
Angel Street, EC1A
Apothecary Street, EC4V Apothecary Street - the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries is nearby (City of London)
Apothecary Street, EC4V
Appold Street, EC2A Appold Street runs north-south on the City of London side of Liverpool Street station (City of London)
Appold Street, EC2A
Arab Banking Corp. House, EC2R Arab Banking Corp. House can be found on Moorgate (City of London)
Arab Banking Corp. House, EC2R
Arthur Street, EC4R Arthur Street was built in 1835 as part of the improved approaches to the new (1831) London Bridge (City of London)
Arthur Street, EC4R
Artizan Street, E1 A street within the E1 postcode (City of London)
Artizan Street, E1
Ashentree Court, EC4Y Ashentree Court was named after the ashen trees formerly located here at the Whitefriars’ monastery (City of London)
Ashentree Court, EC4Y
Atlas House, EC2V Atlas House is sited on King Street (City of London)
Atlas House, EC2V
Austin Friars, EC2N Austin Friars was an Augustinian friary from its foundation in the 1260s, until its dissolution in 1538 (City of London)
Austin Friars, EC2N
Ave Maria Lane, EC4M Ave Maria Lane is the southern extension of Warwick Lane, between Amen Corner and Ludgate Hill (City of London)
Ave Maria Lane, EC4M
Back Alley, EC3N Back Alley is a small alleyway off of Northumberland Alley (City of London)
Back Alley, EC3N
Bakers Hall Court, EC3R Bakers’ Hall Court lies at the end of Harp Street (City of London)
Bakers Hall Court, EC3R
Ball Alley, EC3M Ball Alley existed on maps between the 1750s and 1950s (City of London)
Ball Alley, EC3M
Ball Court, EC3V Ball Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Ball Court, EC3V
Baltic Street West, EC1Y Baltic Street is split into east and west halves (City of London)
Baltic Street West, EC1Y
Barnard’s Inn, EC4A Barnard’s Inn lies near Holborn Circus (City of London)
Barnard’s Inn, EC4A
Bartholomew Close, EC1A Bartholomew Close is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Bartholomew Close, EC1A
Bartholomew Lane, EC3V Bartholomew Lane runs between the junction of Lothbury and Throgmorton Street in the north to Threadneedle Street in the south. (City of London)
Bartholomew Lane, EC3V
Bartholomew Passage, EC1A Bartholomew Passage is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Bartholomew Passage, EC1A
Bartholomew Place, EC1A Bartholomew Place is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Bartholomew Place, EC1A
Bartletts Place, EC2A Bartletts Place was Bartletts Buildings on the 1860s mapping, not appearing before then (City of London)
Bartletts Place, EC2A
Bartlett’s Buildings, EC4A Bartlett’s Buildings was the name of a street situated off of Holborn Circus (City of London)
Bartlett’s Buildings, EC4A
Basildon House, EC2R Basildon House is a block on Moorgate (City of London)
Basildon House, EC2R
Basing Lane, EC4M Basing Lane ran west from Bow Lane to Bread Street (City of London)
Basing Lane, EC4M
Basinghall Avenue, EC2V Basinghall Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Basinghall Avenue, EC2V
Basinghall Street, EC2V Basinghall Street joins Gresham Street to the south (City of London)
Basinghall Street, EC2V
Bassishaw Highwalk, EC2V Bassishaw Highwalk is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Bassishaw Highwalk, EC2V
Basterfield House, EC1Y Basterfield House is located on Unnamed Road (City of London)
Basterfield House, EC1Y
Bavaria House, EC2A Bavaria House is sited on Appold Street (City of London)
Bavaria House, EC2A
Baynard House, EC4V Baynard House is a block on Queen Victoria Street (City of London)
Baynard House, EC4V
Bear Alley, EC4A Bear Alley is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Bear Alley, EC4A
Beer Lane, EC3R Beer Lane ran from the east end of Great Tower Street to Lower Thames Street (City of London)
Beer Lane, EC3R
Bell Inn Yard, EC3M Bell Inn Yard has also been simply ’Bell Yard’ on maps (City of London)
Bell Inn Yard, EC3M
Bell Wharf Lane, EC4R Bell Wharf Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Bell Wharf Lane, EC4R
Bell Yard, EC4A Bell Yard is a small lane off the Strand where the Bell hostel once stood (City of London)
Bell Yard, EC4A
Bells Alley, EC2N Bells Alley is a road in the SW6 postcode area (City of London)
Bells Alley, EC2N
Bengal Court, EC3V Bengal Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Bengal Court, EC3V
Bevis Marks House, EC3 Bevis Marks House is a building on Goring Street (City of London)
Bevis Marks House, EC3
Bevis Marks House, EC3A Bevis Marks House is a block on Bevis Marks (City of London)
Bevis Marks House, EC3A
Bevis Marks, EC3A Bevis Marks is a short street in the ward of Aldgate in the City of London (City of London)
Bevis Marks, EC3A
Billiter Square, EC3M Billiter Square is a former square in the City of London (City of London)
Billiter Square, EC3M
Billiter Street, EC3M Billiter Street was once home to a medieval bell foundry (City of London)
Billiter Street, EC3M
Birchin Lane, EC3V Birchin Lane was owned by a medieval gentleman called Birchervere (City of London)
Birchin Lane, EC3V
Bishop’s Court, EC4M Bishop?s Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Bishop’s Court, EC4M
Bishopsgate, EC3V Bishopsgate is named after one of the original eight gates in the London Wall. (City of London)
Bishopsgate, EC3V
Black Friars Lane, EC4V Black Friars Lane was known as Water Lane until 1940 (City of London)
Black Friars Lane, EC4V
Black Raven Alley, EC4R Black Raven Alley ran south from 105 Upper Thames Street down to Swan Wharf, just to the west of London Bridge (City of London)
Black Raven Alley, EC4R
Blackfriars Bridge, EC4V Blackfriars Bridge serves as a road and pedestrian bridge spanning the River Thames (City of London)
Blackfriars Bridge, EC4V
Blackfriars House, EC4V Blackfriars House is a block on New Bridge Street (City of London)
Blackfriars House, EC4V
Blackfriars Lane, EC4V Blackfriars Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Blackfriars Lane, EC4V
Blackfriars Underpass, EC4V Blackfriars Underpass is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Blackfriars Underpass, EC4V
Blackwell House, EC2V Blackwell House is sited on Guildhall Yard (City of London)
Blackwell House, EC2V
Blomfield Street, EC2M Blomfield Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Blomfield Street, EC2M
Bolt Court, EC4A Bolt Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Bolt Court, EC4A
Boston House, EC2M Boston House is a building on New Broad Street (City of London)
Boston House, EC2M
Botolph Alley, EC3R Botolph Alley is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Botolph Alley, EC3R
Botolph Lane, EC3R Botolph Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Botolph Lane, EC3R
Boundary House, EC1M Boundary House is a block on Charterhouse Street (City of London)
Boundary House, EC1M
Bouverie House, EC4 Bouverie House is a block on Fleet Street (City of London)
Bouverie House, EC4
Bouverie House, EC4A Bouverie House is a block on Fleet Street (City of London)
Bouverie House, EC4A
Bouverie Street, EC4Y Bouverie Street is named for the Pleydell-Bouveries, Earls of Radnor, who were landowners in this area (City of London)
Bouverie Street, EC4Y
Bow Bells House, EC4M Bow Bells House is a block on Bread Street (City of London)
Bow Bells House, EC4M
Bow Churchyard, EC2V Bow Churchyard is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Bow Churchyard, EC2V
Bow House, EC4M Bow House is a block on Bow Churchyard (City of London)
Bow House, EC4M
Bow Lane, EC4M Bow Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Bow Lane, EC4M
Bowater House, EC1Y Bowater House is sited on Fann Street (City of London)
Bowater House, EC1Y
Brabant Court, EC3M Brabant Court off Philpot Lane, probably marks the site of a settlement of immigrants from Brabant, a province now split between Belgium and the Netherlands (City of London)
Brabant Court, EC3M
Bracken House, EC4M Bracken House is a block on Friday Street (City of London)
Bracken House, EC4M
Bread Street Hill, EC4V Bread Street Hill was the southern continuation of Bread Street, running between Old Fish Street and Thames Street (City of London)
Bread Street Hill, EC4V
Bread Street, EC4M Bread Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Bread Street, EC4M
Breams Buildings, EC4A Breams Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Breams Buildings, EC4A
Brewers Hall Gardens, EC2V Brewers Hall Gardens is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Brewers Hall Gardens, EC2V
Brick Court, EC4Y Brick Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Brick Court, EC4Y
Bride Court, EC4Y Bride Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Bride Court, EC4Y
Bride Lane, EC4Y Bride Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Bride Lane, EC4Y
Bridewell Place, EC4V Bridewell Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Bridewell Place, EC4V
Britannic House, EC2M Britannic House is a block on Finsbury Circus (City of London)
Britannic House, EC2M
Broad Street Place, EC2M Broad Street Place is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Broad Street Place, EC2M
Broadgate Circle, EC2M Broadgate Circle is situated at the centre of the Broadgate development (City of London)
Broadgate Circle, EC2M
Broadgate Tower, EC2A Broadgate Tower can be found on Primrose Street (City of London)
Broadgate Tower, EC2A
Broadwalk House, EC2A Broadwalk House is a block on Appold Street (City of London)
Broadwalk House, EC2A
Broken Wharf House, EC4V Broken Wharf House is a block on Broken Wharf (City of London)
Broken Wharf House, EC4V
Broken Wharf, EC4V Broken Wharf is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Broken Wharf, EC4V
Bucklersbury House Walbrook, EC4N Bucklersbury House Walbrook is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Bucklersbury House Walbrook, EC4N
Bucklersbury, EC4N Bucklersbury is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Bucklersbury, EC4N
Budge Row, EC4N Budge Row lies off the north side of Cannon Street, about 80 yards west of the main line station (City of London)
Budge Row, EC4N
Bull and Mouth Street, EC2V Bull and Mouth Street ran between King Edward Street and St Martin’s Le Grand (City of London)
Bull and Mouth Street, EC2V
Bulls Head Passage, EC3M Bulls Head Passage is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Bulls Head Passage, EC3M
Burgon Street, EC4V Burgon Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Burgon Street, EC4V
Bury Court, EC3A Bury Court is located off St Mary Axe (City of London)
Bury Court, EC3A
Bury House, EC3A Bury House is a building on Bury Street (City of London)
Bury House, EC3A
Bury Street, EC3A Bury Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Bury Street, EC3A
Bush Lane, EC4R Bush Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Bush Lane, EC4R
Calico House, EC4M Calico House is a block on Watling Street (City of London)
Calico House, EC4M
Camomile Street, EC3A Camomile Street is a short street in the City of London (City of London)
Camomile Street, EC3A
Candlewick House, EC4N Candlewick House is a block on Cannon Street (City of London)
Candlewick House, EC4N
Cannon Bridge, EC4R Cannon Bridge is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Cannon Bridge, EC4R
Cannon Street, EC4N Cannon Street runs nearly parallel with the River Thames, about 250 metres north of it, in the south of the City of London (City of London)
Cannon Street, EC4N
Cannon Street, EC4R Cannon Street follows the route of a riverside path that ran along the Thames (City of London)
Cannon Street, EC4R
Cap House, EC1A Cap House is a building on Long Lane (City of London)
Cap House, EC1A
Capel Court, EC2R On the east side of the Bank of England turn into Bartholomew Lane. Capel Court is off to the east (City of London)
Capel Court, EC2R
Capital House, EC4N Capital House is a block on King William Street (City of London)
Capital House, EC4N
Carey Lane, EC2V Carey Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Carey Lane, EC2V
Carlisle Avenue, EC3N Carlisle Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC3N postal area (City of London)
Carlisle Avenue, EC3N
Carmelite House, EC4Y Carmelite House is sited on Victoria Embankment (City of London)
Carmelite House, EC4Y
Carmelite Street, EC4Y Carmelite Street continues south from Whitefriars Street, which itself is just off Fleet Street (City of London)
Carmelite Street, EC4Y
Carpmael Building, EC4Y Carpmael Building is a block on Crown Office Row (City of London)
Carpmael Building, EC4Y
Carter Lane, EC4V Carter Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Carter Lane, EC4V
Carter Street, EC3A Carter Street was off Cutler Street (City of London)
Carter Street, EC3A
Castle Court, EC3V Castle Court leads off Birchin Lane (City of London)
Castle Court, EC3V
Cavendish Court, EC3A Cavendish Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Cavendish Court, EC3A
Centennium House, EC3R A block within the EC3R postcode (City of London)
Centennium House, EC3R
Central Markets, EC1A Central Markets is the address of traders within Smithfield Market (City of London)
Central Markets, EC1A
Centurion House, EC3N Centurion House is a building on Jewry Street (City of London)
Centurion House, EC3N
Chancery Lane, WC2A Chancery Lane has formed the western boundary of the City of London since 1994, having previously been divided between the London boroughs of Westminster and Camden (City of London)
Chancery Lane, WC2A
Change Alley, EC3V Change Alley is a thoroughfare between Lombard Street and Cornhill in London’s financial district (City of London)
Change Alley, EC3V
Charterhouse Mews, EC1A Charterhouse Mews is one of the streets of London in the EC1M postal area (City of London)
Charterhouse Mews, EC1A
Charterhouse Street, EC1A Charterhouse Street is a street on the northern boundary of the City of London (City of London)
Charterhouse Street, EC1A
Cheapside, EC2V Cheapside is a street in the City of London, the historic and modern financial centre of London (City of London)
Cheapside, EC2V
Cheyne House, EC2V Cheyne House is sited on Cheapside (City of London)
Cheyne House, EC2V
Church Entry, EC4V Church Entry is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Church Entry, EC4V
Churchyard Path, EC1A Churchyard Path runs up to the church of St Bartholomew (City of London)
Churchyard Path, EC1A
City Apartments, EC4 City Apartments can be found on Cannon Street (City of London)
City Apartments, EC4
City House, EC4N City House is a block on Cannon Street (City of London)
City House, EC4N
City Place House, EC2V City Place House is a block on Basinghall Street (City of London)
City Place House, EC2V
City Tower, EC2V City Tower is a block on Unnamed Road (City of London)
City Tower, EC2V
Clements Lane, EC4N Clements Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Clements Lane, EC4N
Cliffords Inn Passage, EC4Y Cliffords Inn Passage is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Cliffords Inn Passage, EC4Y
Cliffords Inn, EC4A Cliffords Inn is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Cliffords Inn, EC4A
Cloak Lane, EC4N Cloak Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Cloak Lane, EC4N
Cloth Fair, EC1A Cloth Fair stands where the original Bartholomew Fair was held in medieval times. (City of London)
Cloth Fair, EC1A
Clothier Street, EC3A A street within the E1, postcode (City of London)
Clothier Street, EC3A
Clothworkers Hall, EC3M Clothworkers Hall is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Clothworkers Hall, EC3M
Coach & Horses Yard, EC1A Coach & Horses Yard lay behind the Coach & Horses pub at 71 Bartholomew Close (City of London)
Coach & Horses Yard, EC1A
Cobb Street, E1 Cobb Street was laid out in 1899-1904 by Sir Algernon Osborn (City of London)
Cobb Street, E1
Cobham House, EC4V Cobham House is a block on Black Friars Lane (City of London)
Cobham House, EC4V
Cock Alley, EC2M Cock Alley was a rather risque streetname leading west off Norton Folgate (City of London)
Cock Alley, EC2M
Cock Lane, EC1A Cock Lane leads from Giltspur Street in the east to Snow Hill in the west (City of London)
Cock Lane, EC1A
Coldwatch House, EC1A Coldwatch House is a block on Giltspur Street (City of London)
Coldwatch House, EC1A
Coleman Street, EC2V Coleman Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Coleman Street, EC2V
College Hill, EC4R College Hill is named after Sir Richard Whittington’s college, set up here in the early 1400s (City of London)
College Hill, EC4R
College Street, EC4R College Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
College Street, EC4R
Compter Passage, EC2V Compter Passage is a location in London (City of London)
Compter Passage, EC2V
Coopers Row, EC3N Coopers Row is one of the streets of London in the EC3N postal area (City of London)
Coopers Row, EC3N
Copthall Avenue, EC2N Copthall Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC2N postal area (City of London)
Copthall Avenue, EC2N
Copthall Avenue, EC2R Copthall Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Copthall Avenue, EC2R
Corbet Court, EC3V Corbet Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Corbet Court, EC3V
Cornhill, EC3V Cornhill is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Cornhill, EC3V
Cousin Lane, EC4R Cousin Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Cousin Lane, EC4R
Crane Court, EC4Y Crane Court lay beside the Two Crane Inn Tavern. (City of London)
Crane Court, EC4Y
Cree House, EC3A Cree House can be found on Creechurch Lane (City of London)
Cree House, EC3A
Creechurch Lane, EC3A Creechurch Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Creechurch Lane, EC3A
Creed Court, EC4M Creed Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Creed Court, EC4M
Creed Lane, EC4V Creed Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Creed Lane, EC4V
Crescent House, EC1M Crescent House is sited on Goswell Road (City of London)
Crescent House, EC1M
Crescent Row, EC1Y Crescent Row is one of the streets of London in the EC1Y postal area (City of London)
Crescent Row, EC1Y
Crosby Square, EC3A Crosby Square is a location in London (City of London)
Crosby Square, EC3A
Cross Key Court, EC2R After 1939, the new name for Sun Court, Great Swan Alley was Cross Key Court, EC2 (City of London)
Cross Key Court, EC2R
Cross Lane, EC3R Cross Lane connects St Dunstan’s Hill with Harp Lane (City of London)
Cross Lane, EC3R
Crown Court, EC2V Crown Court is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Crown Court, EC2V
Crown Office Row, EC4Y Crown Office Row is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Crown Office Row, EC4Y
Crutched Friars, EC3N Crutched Friars is one of the streets of London in the EC3N postal area (City of London)
Crutched Friars, EC3N
Cullum Street, EC3M Cullum Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Cullum Street, EC3M
Cullum Welch House, EC1M Cullum Welch House is a block on Golden Lane (City of London)
Cullum Welch House, EC1M
Cunard Place, EC3A Cunard Place is an alleyway off Bury Street (City of London)
Cunard Place, EC3A
Cursitor Street, EC4A Cursitor Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Cursitor Street, EC4A
Custom House Walkway, EC3R Custom House Walkway is part of the Thames Path (City of London)
Custom House Walkway, EC3R
Cutler Street, EC3A Cutler Street runs north off Houndsditch (City of London)
Cutler Street, EC3A
Daniel House, EC4A Daniel House is a block on Fleet Street (City of London)
Daniel House, EC4A
Dark House Walk, EC3R Dark House Walk is part of the Thames Path (City of London)
Dark House Walk, EC3R
Dauntsey House, EC2V Dauntsey House can be found on Frederick’s Place (City of London)
Dauntsey House, EC2V
Deans Court, EC4V Deans Court is directly opposite the south west corner of St Paul’s Cathedral, on the south side of St Paul’s Churchyard (City of London)
Deans Court, EC4V
Dean’s Court, EC4M Dean’s Court was a small alley off Old Bailey, on maps between 1750 and 1950 (City of London)
Dean’s Court, EC4M
Devonshire Row, EC3A Devonshire Row leads off Bishopsgate (City of London)
Devonshire Row, EC3A
Devonshire Square, E1 Devonshire Square lies at the end of Devonshire Row (City of London)
Devonshire Square, E1
Distaff Lane, EC4V Distaff Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Distaff Lane, EC4V
Dixon House, EC3A Dixon House is a block on Fenchurch Street (City of London)
Dixon House, EC3A
Doctor Johnsons Buildings, EC4Y Doctor Johnsons Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Doctor Johnsons Buildings, EC4Y
Dominion Street, EC2M Dominion Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Dominion Street, EC2M
Dorset Rise, EC4Y Dorset Rise is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Dorset Rise, EC4Y
Dowgate Hill, EC4R Dowgate Hill is a continuation of Walbrook along the west side of Cannon Street Station, leading to Dowgate Dock (City of London)
Dowgate Hill, EC4R
Dr Johnson’s House, EC4A Dr Johnson’s House is a block on Gough Square (City of London)
Dr Johnson’s House, EC4A
Drapers Gardens, EC2N Drapers Gardens is a block in Copthall Avenue (City of London)
Drapers Gardens, EC2N
Duke Street, EC1A Duke Street ran off Smithfield, becoming part of Little Britain in 1885 (City of London)
Duke Street, EC1A
Duke Street, EC3A Duke Street was once a street leading northwest from Aldgate (City of London)
Duke Street, EC3A
Dukes House, EC3A Dukes House is a block on Dukes Place (City of London)
Dukes House, EC3A
Dukes Place, EC3A Duke’s Place was formerly called Duke Street (City of London)
Dukes Place, EC3A
Dunster Court, EC3R Dunster Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Dunster Court, EC3R
Dyer’s Buildings, EC1N This is a street in the EC1N postcode area (City of London)
Dyer’s Buildings, EC1N
East Harding Street, EC4A This is a street in the EC4A postcode area (City of London)
East Harding Street, EC4A
East Market, EC2Y East Market is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
East Market, EC2Y
East Passage, EC1A East Passage is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
East Passage, EC1A
East Poultry Avenue, EC1A East Poultry Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
East Poultry Avenue, EC1A
Eastcheap, EC3M A street within the EC3M postcode (City of London)
Eastcheap, EC3M
Eastcheap, EC3R Eastcheap is the western continuation of Great Tower Street towards the Monument junction (City of London)
Eastcheap, EC3R
Eastgate House, EC3A Eastgate House is a block on Dukes Place (City of London)
Eastgate House, EC3A
Eldon Street, EC2M Eldon Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Eldon Street, EC2M
Elliot’s Court, EC4M Elliot’s Court is featured on maps from 1750 to 1950 (City of London)
Elliot’s Court, EC4M
Equitable House, EC4 Equitable House is sited on King William Street (City of London)
Equitable House, EC4
Equitable House, EC4R Equitable House is a block on King William Street (City of London)
Equitable House, EC4R
Essex Court, EC4Y Essex Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Essex Court, EC4Y
Exchange Arcade, EC2A Exchange Arcade is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Exchange Arcade, EC2A
Exchange Buildings, EC3A Exchange Buildings is a former street (City of London)
Exchange Buildings, EC3A
Exchange House, EC2A Exchange House is a block on Primrose Street (City of London)
Exchange House, EC2A
Exchange Square, EC2A Exchange Square is one of the streets of London in the EC2A postal area (City of London)
Exchange Square, EC2A
Exchange Steps, EC3V Exchange Steps is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Exchange Steps, EC3V
Falcon Court, EC4Y Falcon Court is a courtyard off the south side of Fleet Street between Chancery Lane and Fetter Lane. (City of London)
Falcon Court, EC4Y
Faraday Building, EC4V Faraday Building is a building on New Bell Yard (City of London)
Faraday Building, EC4V
Farringdon Road, EC1A Farringdon Road is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Farringdon Road, EC1A
Farringdon Road, EC4V Farringdon Road is a road in the EC4A postcode area (City of London)
Farringdon Road, EC4V
Farringdon Street, EC1A The building of Farringdon Street is considered one of the greatest urban engineering achievements of the 19th century. (City of London)
Farringdon Street, EC1A
Farringdon Street, EC4M Farringdon Street was constructed over the Fleet river (City of London)
Farringdon Street, EC4M
Fen Court, EC3M Fen Court is a location in London (City of London)
Fen Court, EC3M
Fenchurch Avenue, EC3M Fenchurch Avenue runs from Lime Street to Billiter Street (City of London)
Fenchurch Avenue, EC3M
Fenchurch Buildings, EC3A Fenchurch Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Fenchurch Buildings, EC3A
Fenchurch Mews, EC3M A street within the EC3M postcode (City of London)
Fenchurch Mews, EC3M
Fenchurch Place, EC3M Fenchurch Place is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Fenchurch Place, EC3M
Fenchurch Street, EC3M Fenchurch Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Fenchurch Street, EC3M
Fetter Lane, EC4A Fetter Lane is corrupted from ’Fautre’ which was the name for a spear rest - spears were made close by (City of London)
Fetter Lane, EC4A
Finch Lane, EC3V Finch Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Finch Lane, EC3V
Finsbury Avenue, EC2M Finsbury Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Finsbury Avenue, EC2M
Finsbury Circus Gardens, EC2M Finsbury Circus Gardens is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Finsbury Circus Gardens, EC2M
Finsbury Circus House, EC2M Finsbury Circus House is a block on Eldon Street (City of London)
Finsbury Circus House, EC2M
Finsbury Circus, EC2M Finsbury Circus is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Finsbury Circus, EC2M
Fish Street Hill, EC3M Fish Street Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Fish Street Hill, EC3M
Fitz Eylwin House, EC1A Fitz Eylwin House is a block on Holborn Viaduct (City of London)
Fitz Eylwin House, EC1A
Five Kings House, EC4R Five Kings House is located on Queen Street Place (City of London)
Five Kings House, EC4R
Fleet Place House, EC4M Fleet Place House is a building on Fleet Place (City of London)
Fleet Place House, EC4M
Fleet Place, EC4M Fleet Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Fleet Place, EC4M
Fleet Street, EC4A Fleet Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Fleet Street, EC4A
Fleetbank House, EC4Y Fleetbank House is located on Salisbury Square (City of London)
Fleetbank House, EC4Y
Fleur De Lis Court, EC4A Fleur De Lis Court was situated off Fetter Lane (City of London)
Fleur De Lis Court, EC4A
Fleur De Lys Court, EC3A Fleur De Lys Court was situated off Houndsditch (City of London)
Fleur De Lys Court, EC3A
Foresight House, EC4R Foresight House is a block on Arthur Street (City of London)
Foresight House, EC4R
Foster Lane, EC2V Foster Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Foster Lane, EC2V
Founders Court, EC2R Founders Court is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Founders Court, EC2R
Fountain House, EC3M Fountain House is a building on Fenchurch Street (City of London)
Fountain House, EC3M
Francis Taylor Building, EC4Y Francis Taylor Building is a block on Kings Bench Walk (City of London)
Francis Taylor Building, EC4Y
Fredericks Place, EC2V Fredericks Place is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Fredericks Place, EC2V
French Ordinary Court, EC3M French Ordinary Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
French Ordinary Court, EC3M
Friday Street, EC4V Friday Street is a small street in the City of London (City of London)
Friday Street, EC4V
Furnival Street, EC4A Furnival Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Furnival Street, EC4A
Garden Court, EC4Y Garden Court is a pedestrian thoroughfare in the Temple area (City of London)
Garden Court, EC4Y
Garlick Hill, EC4N Garlick Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Garlick Hill, EC4N
Genesis House, EC4V Genesis House is a building on Godliman Street (City of London)
Genesis House, EC4V
George Yard, EC3V George Yard is a yard off of Lombard Street (City of London)
George Yard, EC3V
Giltspur House, EC1A Giltspur House is a block on Giltspur Street (City of London)
Giltspur House, EC1A
Giltspur Street, EC1A Giltspur Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Giltspur Street, EC1A
Godliman Street, EC4M Godliman Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Godliman Street, EC4M
Goldsmith Street, EC2V Goldsmith Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Goldsmith Street, EC2V
Goring Street, EC3A Goring Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Goring Street, EC3A
Goswell Road, EC1Y Goswell Road is one of the streets of London in the EC1M postal area (City of London)
Goswell Road, EC1Y
Gough Square, EC4A Gough Square is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Gough Square, EC4A
Gracechurch Street, EC3V Gracechurch Street is in the heart of Roman Londinium - it runs directly over the site of the basilica and forum (City of London)
Gracechurch Street, EC3V
Grand Avenue, EC1A Grand Avenue runs through the centre of Smithfield Market (City of London)
Grand Avenue, EC1A
Grant’s Quay Wharf, EC3R Grant’s Quay Wharf is part of the Thames Path (City of London)
Grant’s Quay Wharf, EC3R
Gravel Lane, E1 Gravel Lane is one of the streets of London in the E1 postal area (City of London)
Gravel Lane, E1
Great Arthur House, EC1Y Great Arthur House is a building on Fann Street (City of London)
Great Arthur House, EC1Y
Great New Street, EC4A Great New Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Great New Street, EC4A
Great St Helen’s, EC3A This is a street in the EC3A postcode area (City of London)
Great St Helen’s, EC3A
Great St Thomas Apostle, EC4R Great St Thomas A postle, a rather odd streetname, between Garlick Hill and Queen Street (City of London)
Great St Thomas Apostle, EC4R
Great St Thomas, EC4R Great St Thomas is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Great St Thomas, EC4R
Great Swan Alley, EC2R Great Swan Alley is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Great Swan Alley, EC2R
Great Tower Street, EC3R Great Tower Street, originally known just as Tower Street, forms an eastern continuation of Eastcheap (City of London)
Great Tower Street, EC3R
Great Winchester Street, EC2N Great Winchester Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2N postal area (City of London)
Great Winchester Street, EC2N
Greenhill House, EC1M Greenhill House is a block on Cowcross Street (City of London)
Greenhill House, EC1M
Greenhills Rents, EC1A Greenhills Rents is one of the streets of London in the EC1M postal area (City of London)
Greenhills Rents, EC1A
Gresham Street, EC2V Gresham Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Gresham Street, EC2V
Grocers’ Hall Court, EC2R Grocers? Hall Court is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Grocers’ Hall Court, EC2R
Groveland Court, EC4M Groveland Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Groveland Court, EC4M
Guildhall Buildings, EC2V Guildhall Buildings connects Basinghall Street with the Guildhall area (City of London)
Guildhall Buildings, EC2V
Guildhall House, EC2V Guildhall House is a block on Gresham Street (City of London)
Guildhall House, EC2V
Guildhall Yard, EC2V Guildhall Yard is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Guildhall Yard, EC2V
Gunpowder Square, EC4A Gunpowder Square is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Gunpowder Square, EC4A
Gutter Lane, EC2V Gutter Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Gutter Lane, EC2V
Habib House, EC2R Habib House is a block on Moorgate (City of London)
Habib House, EC2R
Half Moon Court, EC1A Halfmoon Court is the southern most of five passages leading eastward from Kinghorn Street (City of London)
Half Moon Court, EC1A
Hamilton House, EC4Y Hamilton House is a block on Temple Avenue (City of London)
Hamilton House, EC4Y
Hanging Sword Alley, EC4Y Hanging Sword Alley is an alley running between Whitefriars Street and Salisbury Square (City of London)
Hanging Sword Alley, EC4Y
Hanseatic Walk, EC4R Hanseatic Walk is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Hanseatic Walk, EC4R
Harcourt Buildings, EC4Y Harcourt Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Harcourt Buildings, EC4Y
Hare Court, EC4Y Hare Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Hare Court, EC4Y
Hare Place, EC4Y Hare Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Hare Place, EC4Y
Harmsworth House, EC4Y Harmsworth House lies near the Inner Temple (City of London)
Harmsworth House, EC4Y
Harp House, EC4A Harp House is a block on Farringdon Street (City of London)
Harp House, EC4A
Harp Lane, EC3R Harp Lane once connected Thames Street with Great Tower Street (City of London)
Harp Lane, EC3R
Harrow Place, E1 Harrow Place is one of the streets of London in the E1 postal area (City of London)
Harrow Place, E1
Harrow Place, E1 Harrow Place is an old East End street (City of London)
Harrow Place, E1
Hart Street, Hart Street is an old East End street (City of London)
Hart Street,
Hart Street, EC3R Hart Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Hart Street, EC3R
Hat and Mitre Court, EC4Y Hat and Mitre Court is a road in the EC1M postcode area (City of London)
Hat and Mitre Court, EC4Y
Hatfield House, EC1M Hatfield House is a block on Baltic Street West (City of London)
Hatfield House, EC1M
Hatfield House, EC1Y Hatfield House is a block on Baltic Street West (City of London)
Hatfield House, EC1Y
Haydon Street, E1 The eastern end of Haydon Street was called Mansell Passage (City of London)
Haydon Street, E1
Hayne Street, EC1A Hayne Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Hayne Street, EC1A
Heneage Lane, EC3A Heneage Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Heneage Lane, EC3A
Heron Tower, EC2N Heron Tower is a block on Bishopsgate (City of London)
Heron Tower, EC2N
High Timber Street, EC4V High Timber Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
High Timber Street, EC4V
Hill House, EC4A Hill House is sited on Little New Street (City of London)
Hill House, EC4A
Hind Court, EC4Y Hind Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Hind Court, EC4Y
Hogarth Court, EC3M Hogarth Court runs from Fenchurch Avenue to Fenchurch Street (City of London)
Hogarth Court, EC3M
Holborn Circus, EC1N Holborn Circus is a junction of five highways in the City of London, on the boundary between Holborn, Hatton Garden and Smithfield (City of London)
Holborn Circus, EC1N
Holborn Viaduct, EC1A Holborn Viaduct is a road bridge in London and the name of the street which crosses it (City of London)
Holborn Viaduct, EC1A
Holborn, EC1N Holborn commemorates the River Fleet, also known as the Holbourne stream (City of London)
Holborn, EC1N
Holland House, EC3A Holland House is a block on Bury Street (City of London)
Holland House, EC3A
Honey Lane, EC2V Honey Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Honey Lane, EC2V
Hood Court, EC4Y Hood Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Hood Court, EC4Y
Hosier Lane, EC1A Hosier Lane is named after the former hosiery trade based here. (City of London)
Hosier Lane, EC1A
Houndsditch, EC3A Houndsditch runs through the Portsoken and Bishopsgate Without wards of the City of London - areas traditionally considered part of the East End (City of London)
Houndsditch, EC3A
Idol Lane, EC3R Idol Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Idol Lane, EC3R
India Street, EC3N India Street, formerly George Street, was renamed in 1913 when the surrounding area consisted of the tea warehouses of the East and West India Docks Company. (City of London)
India Street, EC3N
Inner Temple Lane, EC4Y Inner Temple Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Inner Temple Lane, EC4Y
Ireland Yard, EC4V Ireland Yard is an alleyway leading off of Playhouse Yard (City of London)
Ireland Yard, EC4V
Irongate House, EC3A Irongate House is a block on Dukes Place (City of London)
Irongate House, EC3A
Ironmonger Lane, EC2V Ironmonger Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Ironmonger Lane, EC2V
Italia Conti House, EC1M Italia Conti House can be found on Goswell Road (City of London)
Italia Conti House, EC1M
Iwelines , Iwelines is an old East End street (City of London)
Iwelines ,
James Court, EC3A James Court is an old East End street (City of London)
James Court, EC3A
Jarvis House, EC1A Jarvis House is a block on Smithfield Street (City of London)
Jarvis House, EC1A
Jewry Street, EC3N Jewry Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3N postal area (City of London)
Jewry Street, EC3N
John Carpenter House, EC4Y John Carpenter House is a block on John Carpenter Street (City of London)
John Carpenter House, EC4Y
John Carpenter Street, EC4Y John Carpenter was town clerk of the City of London in the fifteenth century, and founder of the City of London School (City of London)
John Carpenter Street, EC4Y
John Stow House, EC3A John Stow House is sited on Bevis Marks (City of London)
John Stow House, EC3A
Kildare House, EC4Y Kildare House can be found on Dorset Rise (City of London)
Kildare House, EC4Y
King Edward Street, EC1A King Edward Street runs from Newgate Street in the south to Little Britain in the north (City of London)
King Edward Street, EC1A
King Street, EC2V King Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
King Street, EC2V
King William House, EC3R King William House is a block on Eastcheap (City of London)
King William House, EC3R
King William Street, EC4N The northern section of King William Street runs diagonally northwards of the Monument junction (City of London)
King William Street, EC4N
King William Street, EC4R King William Street runs from a junction with Lombard Street to Monument junction from where continues south into London Bridge. (City of London)
King William Street, EC4R
King’s Bench Walk Temple, EC4Y A street within the EC4Y postcode (City of London)
King’s Bench Walk Temple, EC4Y
King’s Bench Walk, EC4Y King?s Bench Walk is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
King’s Bench Walk, EC4Y
King’s House, EC2V King’s House is a block on King Street (City of London)
King’s House, EC2V
Kinghorn Street, EC1A Kinghorn Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Kinghorn Street, EC1A
Kings Bench Walk, EC4Y Kings Bench Walk is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Kings Bench Walk, EC4Y
King’s Arms Yard, EC2R King’s Arms Yard runs east from Moorgate Street (City of London)
King’s Arms Yard, EC2R
Knightrider Court, EC4V Knightrider Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Knightrider Court, EC4V
Knightrider Street, EC4V Knightrider Street was supposedly a route that knights would take from the Tower of London to Smithfield, where jousts were held (City of London)
Knightrider Street, EC4V
Lackington Street, EC2M Lackington Street is a road in the EC2A postcode area (City of London)
Lackington Street, EC2M
Lamb Building, EC4Y Lamb Building is a block on Pump Court (City of London)
Lamb Building, EC4Y
Lambeth Hill, EC4V Lambeth Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Lambeth Hill, EC4V
Landmark House, EC3A Landmark House is a block on Leadenhall Street (City of London)
Landmark House, EC3A
Langthorn Court, EC2N Langthorn Court is an historic courtyard in the City of London (City of London)
Langthorn Court, EC2N
Laurence Pountney Hill, EC4R Laurence Pountney Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Laurence Pountney Hill, EC4R
Laurence Pountney Lane, EC4N Laurence Pountney Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Laurence Pountney Lane, EC4N
Lawrence Lane, EC2V Lawrence Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Lawrence Lane, EC2V
Leadenhall Market, EC3M Leadenhall Market is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Leadenhall Market, EC3M
Leadenhall Market, EC3M Leadenhall Market is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Leadenhall Market, EC3M
Leadenhall Place, EC3V Leadenhall Place is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Leadenhall Place, EC3V
Leadenhall Street, EC3A Leadenhall Street - historic home to both the East India Company and Lloyd’s of London. (City of London)
Leadenhall Street, EC3A
Leadenhall Street, EC3M Leadenhall Street is a road in the EC3N postcode area (City of London)
Leadenhall Street, EC3M
Leadenhall Street, EC3V Leadenhall Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Leadenhall Street, EC3V
Leadenhall Street, EC3V Leadenhall Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Leadenhall Street, EC3V
Lime Street, EC3M The name Lime Street comes from the lime burners who once sold lime from there for use in construction (City of London)
Lime Street, EC3M
Limeburner Lane, EC4M Limeburner Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Limeburner Lane, EC4M
Lindsey House, EC1M Lindsey House can be found on Charterhouse Street (City of London)
Lindsey House, EC1M
Lindsey Street, EC1A Lindsey Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Lindsey Street, EC1A
Little Britain, EC1A Little Britain is a street in the City of London running from St Martin’s Le Grand in the east to West Smithfield. (City of London)
Little Britain, EC1A
Little New Street, EC4A Little New Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Little New Street, EC4A
Little Trinity Lane, EC4V Little Trinity Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Little Trinity Lane, EC4V
Lloyd’s Avenue, EC3N A street within the EC3N postcode (City of London)
Lloyd’s Avenue, EC3N
Lloyd’s Building, EC3M Lloyd’s Building is a block on Lime Street (City of London)
Lloyd’s Building, EC3M
Lloyds Avenue, EC3N Lloyds Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC3N postal area (City of London)
Lloyds Avenue, EC3N
Lombard Court, EC3V Lombard Court is a small street between Gracechurch Street and Clements Lane in the heart of London’s financial district (City of London)
Lombard Court, EC3V
Lombard Street, EC3V Lombard Street has a history stretching back to medieval times. (City of London)
Lombard Street, EC3V
London Bridge, EC4R London Bridge is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
London Bridge, EC4R
London Central Markets, EC4A London Central Markets is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
London Central Markets, EC4A
London Street, EC3M London Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
London Street, EC3M
London Wall, EC2M London Wall is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
London Wall, EC2M
London Wall, EC2Y London Wall is one of the streets of London in the EC2Y postal area (City of London)
London Wall, EC2Y
Long Lane, EC1A Long Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Long Lane, EC1A
Lothbury, EC2R Lothbury is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Lothbury, EC2R
Lovat Lane, EC3R Lovat Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Lovat Lane, EC3R
Love Lane, EC2V Love Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Love Lane, EC2V
Lower Thames Street, EC3R Lower Thames Street holds significant historical and architectural importance and is a major traffic route in London. (City of London)
Lower Thames Street, EC3R
Ludgate Broadway, EC4M Ludgate Broadway is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Ludgate Broadway, EC4M
Ludgate Circus, EC4M Ludgate Circus is a junction in the City of London where Farringdon Street and New Bridge Street cross Fleet Street/Ludgate Hill (City of London)
Ludgate Circus, EC4M
Ludgate Hill, EC4M Ludgate Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Ludgate Hill, EC4M
Ludgate House, EC4M Ludgate House is located on Fleet Street (City of London)
Ludgate House, EC4M
Ludgate Square, EC4M Ludgate Square is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Ludgate Square, EC4M
Magpie Alley, EC4Y Magpie Alley marks the position occupied by the dorter (dormitory) of the Friary of the Blessed Virgin of Mount Carmel, commonly called the Whitefriars Monastery (City of London)
Magpie Alley, EC4Y
Mansell Street, E1 Mansell Street runs north-south on the City of London border (City of London)
Mansell Street, E1
Mansion House Place, EC3V Mansion House Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Mansion House Place, EC3V
Mansion House Place, EC4N Mansion House Place is located on Mansion House Place (City of London)
Mansion House Place, EC4N
Manson House Place, EC3V Manson House Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Manson House Place, EC3V
Mark Lane, EC3R Mark Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Mark Lane, EC3R
Martin Lane, EC4N Martin Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Martin Lane, EC4N
Mason’s Avenue, EC2V A street within the EC2V postcode (City of London)
Mason’s Avenue, EC2V
Masters House Temple Church, EC4Y Masters House Temple Church is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Masters House Temple Church, EC4Y
Middle Street, EC1A Middle Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Middle Street, EC1A
Middle Temple Lane, EC4Y Middle Temple Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Middle Temple Lane, EC4Y
Middlesex Passage, EC1A Middlesex Passage is a location in London (City of London)
Middlesex Passage, EC1A
Middlesex Street, E1 Middlesex Street is home to the Petticoat Lane Market (City of London)
Middlesex Street, E1
Miles Lane, EC4R Miles Lane once ran north from Upper Thames Street (City of London)
Miles Lane, EC4R
Milk Street, EC2V Milk Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Milk Street, EC2V
Millennium Bridge House, EC4V Millennium Bridge House is a block on High Timber Street (City of London)
Millennium Bridge House, EC4V
Mincing Lane, EC3R Mincing Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Mincing Lane, EC3R
Minster Court, EC3R Minster Court can be found on Mincing Lane (City of London)
Minster Court, EC3R
Minsters Pavement, EC3A Minsters Pavement is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Minsters Pavement, EC3A
Mintel House, EC4V Mintel House can be found on Playhouse Yard (City of London)
Mintel House, EC4V
Mitre Avenue, EC3A Mitre Avenue is one of the streets of London in the E17 postal area (City of London)
Mitre Avenue, EC3A
Mitre Court Buildings, EC4Y Mitre Court Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Mitre Court Buildings, EC4Y
Mitre Court, EC2V Mitre Court is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Mitre Court, EC2V
Mitre House, EC3A Mitre House is a block on Mitre Street (City of London)
Mitre House, EC3A
Mitre Square, EC3A Mitre Square is a small square in the City of London. (City of London)
Mitre Square, EC3A
Mitre Street, EC3A Mitre Street connects Creechurch Lane with the Aldgate (City of London)
Mitre Street, EC3A
Monkwell House, EC2Y Monkwell House is a building on Barbican Highwalk (City of London)
Monkwell House, EC2Y
Monument Street, EC3R Monument Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Monument Street, EC3R
Moor Alley, EC2M Moor Alley ran from Norton Folgate to Moor’s Garden (City of London)
Moor Alley, EC2M
Moor House, EC2Y Moor House is a block on Fore Street Avenue (City of London)
Moor House, EC2Y
Moor’s Garden, EC2P Moor’s Garden was buried under the platforms of Liverpool Street station (City of London)
Moor’s Garden, EC2P
Moorfields, EC2Y Moorfields is one of the streets of London in the EC2Y postal area (City of London)
Moorfields, EC2Y
Moorgate Hall, EC2M Moorgate Hall is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Moorgate Hall, EC2M
Moorgate Place, EC2R Moorgate Place is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Moorgate Place, EC2R
Moorgate, EC2M Moorgate is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Moorgate, EC2M
Moorgate, EC2R Moorgate is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Moorgate, EC2R
Morley House, EC1A Morley House is a block on Holborn Viaduct (City of London)
Morley House, EC1A
Munster Court, EC3R Munster Court is a road in the SW6 postcode area (City of London)
Munster Court, EC3R
New Baltic House, EC3M New Baltic House is a block on Fenchurch Street (City of London)
New Baltic House, EC3M
New Bridge Street House, EC4V New Bridge Street House is a building on New Bridge Street (City of London)
New Bridge Street House, EC4V
New Bridge Street, EC4V New Bridge Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
New Bridge Street, EC4V
New Broad Street House, EC2M New Broad Street House is a block on Old Broad Street (City of London)
New Broad Street House, EC2M
New Broad Street, EC2M New Broad Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
New Broad Street, EC2M
New Change, EC4M New Change is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
New Change, EC4M
New Court, EC4V New Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
New Court, EC4V
New Fetter Lane, EC1N New Fetter Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC1N postal area (City of London)
New Fetter Lane, EC1N
New Fetter Lane, EC4A New Fetter Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
New Fetter Lane, EC4A
New Goulston Street, E1 New Goulston Street is one of the streets of London in the E1 postal area (City of London)
New Goulston Street, E1
New Liverpool House, EC2M New Liverpool House can be found on Eldon Street (City of London)
New Liverpool House, EC2M
New London Street, EC3R New London Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
New London Street, EC3R
New Street Square, EC4A New Street Square is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
New Street Square, EC4A
New Union Street, EC2Y New Union Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2Y postal area (City of London)
New Union Street, EC2Y
Newbury Street, EC1A Newbury Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Newbury Street, EC1A
Newcastle Close, EC4A Newcastle Close - Newcastle Street until 1939 - was possibly called after a former inn called the Castle located here (City of London)
Newcastle Close, EC4A
Newgate Street, EC1A Newgate Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Newgate Street, EC1A
Newgate Street, EC2V Newgate Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Newgate Street, EC2V
Nicholas House, EC4R Nicholas House is a block on Laurence Pountney Hill (City of London)
Nicholas House, EC4R
Nicholas Lane, EC3V Nicholas Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Nicholas Lane, EC3V
Nicholas Lane, EC4N Nicholas Lane has two non-contiguous sections, separated by King William Street (City of London)
Nicholas Lane, EC4N
NMB House, EC3A NMB House is a block on Bevis Marks (City of London)
NMB House, EC3A
No 1 Poultry, EC2R No 1 Poultry is an office and retail building in London (City of London)
No 1 Poultry, EC2R
Noble Street, EC2V Noble Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Noble Street, EC2V
Nomura House, EC1A Nomura House is a block on St Martin’s Le Grand (City of London)
Nomura House, EC1A
Northern and Shell Building, EC3R Northern and Shell Building at 10 Lower Thames Street - the headquarters of Express newspapers (City of London)
Northern and Shell Building, EC3R
Norwich Street, EC4A Norwich Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Norwich Street, EC4A
Oat Lane, EC2V Oat Lane has been marked on London maps since 1600 and before (City of London)
Oat Lane, EC2V
Ocean House, EC4R Ocean House is a block on Cousin Lane (City of London)
Ocean House, EC4R
Old Bailey, EC4M Old Bailey is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Old Bailey, EC4M
Old Billingsgate Walk, EC3R Old Billingsgate Walk is part of the Thames Path (City of London)
Old Billingsgate Walk, EC3R
Old Broad Street, EC2M Old Broad Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Old Broad Street, EC2M
Old Broad Street, EC2N Old Broad Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2N postal area (City of London)
Old Broad Street, EC2N
Old Change Court, EC4V Old Change Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Old Change Court, EC4V
Old Change House, EC4V Old Change House is a block on Queen Victoria Street (City of London)
Old Change House, EC4V
Old Jewry, EC2R Old Jewry is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Old Jewry, EC2R
Old Mitre Court, EC4Y Old Mitre Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Old Mitre Court, EC4Y
Old Seacoal Lane, EC4M Old Seacoal Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Old Seacoal Lane, EC4M
One Ropemaker Street, EC2Y One Ropemaker Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2Y postal area (City of London)
One Ropemaker Street, EC2Y
Ormond House, EC4N Ormond House is a block on Queen Victoria Street (City of London)
Ormond House, EC4N
Osborn House, E1 Osborn House is a block on Middlesex Street (City of London)
Osborn House, E1
Osborne House, EC2M Osborne House is a block on Devonshire Square (City of London)
Osborne House, EC2M
Oystergate Walk, EC4R Oystergate Walk is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Oystergate Walk, EC4R
Pageantmaster Court, EC4M Pageantmaster Court was Ludgate Court and renamed in the summer of 1993 (City of London)
Pageantmaster Court, EC4M
Pancras Lane, EC4N Pancras Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Pancras Lane, EC4N
Paper Buildings, EC4Y Paper Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Paper Buildings, EC4Y
Park House, EC2M Park House is a block on Finsbury Circus (City of London)
Park House, EC2M
Paternoster Row, EC4M Paternoster Row is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Paternoster Row, EC4M
Paternoster Square, EC4M Paternoster Square is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Paternoster Square, EC4M
Paul’s Walk, EC4V Paul’s Walk runs along the north bank of the Thames (City of London)
Paul’s Walk, EC4V
Paul’s Walk, EC4V Paul’s Walk is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Paul’s Walk, EC4V
Peek House, EC3 Peek House can be found on Eastcheap (City of London)
Peek House, EC3
Peek House, EC3M Peek House is a block on Eastcheap (City of London)
Peek House, EC3M
Pemberton Row, EC4A Sir James Pemberton was Lord Mayor of London in 1611, and a member of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths (City of London)
Pemberton Row, EC4A
Peninsular House, EC3R Peninsular House is a block on Monument Street (City of London)
Peninsular House, EC3R
Peter’s Hill, EC4V Peter’s Hill is the northern access to the Millennium Bridge (City of London)
Peter’s Hill, EC4V
Petticoat Square, E1 A street within the postcode (City of London)
Petticoat Square, E1
Petticoat Tower, E1 Petticoat Tower is a block on Middlesex Street (City of London)
Petticoat Tower, E1
Philpot Lane, EC3M Philpot Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Philpot Lane, EC3M
Pilgrim Street, EC4V Pilgrim Street connects New Bridge Street with Ludgate Hill (City of London)
Pilgrim Street, EC4V
Pindar Street, EC2A Pindar Street is a road in the EC2A postcode area (City of London)
Pindar Street, EC2A
Plantain Gardens, EC3M A street within the EC3V postcode (City of London)
Plantain Gardens, EC3M
Plantain Gardens, EC3M A street within the EC3V postcode (City of London)
Plantain Gardens, EC3M
Plantation Lane, EC3M Plantation Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Plantation Lane, EC3M
Plantation Place, EC3R Plantation Place takes its name from a previous Plantation House, once the recognised centre of the tea trade (City of London)
Plantation Place, EC3R
Playhouse Yard, EC4V Playhouse Yard is named after the Blackfriars theatre which stood here in Shakespeare’s time and where his play’s were performed (City of London)
Playhouse Yard, EC4V
Pleydell Court, EC4A Pleydell Court runs off Pleydell Street - formerly Silver Street (City of London)
Pleydell Court, EC4A
Pleydell House, EC4Y Pleydell House is a block on Pleydell Street (City of London)
Pleydell House, EC4Y
Pleydell Street, EC4Y The Pleydell-Bouveries, Earls of Radnor, were landlords of this area (City of London)
Pleydell Street, EC4Y
Plough Court, EC4R Plough Court was named for the Plough tavern which stood here (City of London)
Plough Court, EC4R
Plough Place, EC4A Plough Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Plough Place, EC4A
Ploughs Place, EC4A Ploughs Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Ploughs Place, EC4A
Plowden Buildings, EC4Y Plowden Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Plowden Buildings, EC4Y
Plumtree Court, EC4A Plumtree Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Plumtree Court, EC4A
PO Box 4, EC1A West Market Building is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
PO Box 4, EC1A
PO Box 4, EC4Y Blackfriars Bridge Foreshore is a location in London (City of London)
PO Box 4, EC4Y
Popes Head Alley, EC3V Popes Head Alley is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Popes Head Alley, EC3V
Poppins Court, EC4A Poppins Court is an historic alley off Fleet Street. (City of London)
Poppins Court, EC4A
Poultry, EC2R Poultry is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Poultry, EC2R
Pountney Hill House, EC4R Pountney Hill House is a building on Laurence Pountney Hill (City of London)
Pountney Hill House, EC4R
Priest’s Court, EC2V Priest?s Court is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Priest’s Court, EC2V
Primrose Street, EC2A Primrose Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2A postal area (City of London)
Primrose Street, EC2A
Princes House, EC2V Princes House is a block on Gresham Street (City of London)
Princes House, EC2V
Princes Street, EC2R Princes Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Princes Street, EC2R
Principal Place, EC2A Principal Place is a location in London (City of London)
Principal Place, EC2A
Priory Court, EC4M Priory Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Priory Court, EC4M
Providian House, EC3R A block within the EC3R postcode (City of London)
Providian House, EC3R
Pudding Lane, EC3R Pudding Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
Pudding Lane, EC3R
Puddle Dock, EC4V Puddle Dock is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Puddle Dock, EC4V
Pump Court, EC4Y Pump Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Pump Court, EC4Y
Quadrant Court, EC4M A street within the EC4M postcode (City of London)
Quadrant Court, EC4M
Queen Isabella Way, EC1A Queen Isabella Way is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Queen Isabella Way, EC1A
Queen St Place, EC4R Queen St Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Queen St Place, EC4R
Queen Street Place, EC4R Queen Street Place is a location in London (City of London)
Queen Street Place, EC4R
Queen Street, EC4N Queen Street is a street in the City of London which runs between Upper Thames Street at its southern end to Cheapside in the north (City of London)
Queen Street, EC4N
Queen Street, EC4R Queen Street is a street in the City of London which runs between Upper Thames Street and Cheapside (City of London)
Queen Street, EC4R
Queen Victoria Street, EC4N Queen Victoria Street runs east by north from its intersection with New Bridge Street and Victoria Embankment (City of London)
Queen Victoria Street, EC4N
Queen Victoria Street, EC4V Queen Victoria Street was built in 1861 to provide a more efficient approach to London’s central business district (City of London)
Queen Victoria Street, EC4V
Queenhithe, EC4V Queenhithe is a small and ancient ward of the City of London, situated by the River Thames and a minor street (City of London)
Queenhithe, EC4V
Queensbridge House, EC4V Queensbridge House is located on Upper Thames Street (City of London)
Queensbridge House, EC4V
Railway Place, Railway Place is an old East End street (City of London)
Railway Place,
Rangoon Street, EC3N The East and West India Docks Company’s eastern trade gave its name to Rangoon Street (City of London)
Rangoon Street, EC3N
Red Lion Court, EC4A Red Lion Court forms part of labyrinth of little passages behind the shops on the north side of Fleet Street. (City of London)
Red Lion Court, EC4A
Regis House, EC4 Regis House is a block on King William Street (City of London)
Regis House, EC4
Regis House, EC4R Regis House is a block on King William Street (City of London)
Regis House, EC4R
Religare House, EC4N Religare House is a block on Cannon Street (City of London)
Religare House, EC4N
River Plate House, EC2M River Plate House is a block on Finsbury Circus (City of London)
River Plate House, EC2M
Riverbank House, EC4R Riverbank House is sited on Angel Lane (City of London)
Riverbank House, EC4R
Riverside Walk East, EC3R Riverside Walk East runs down to the Thames from Lower Thames Street (City of London)
Riverside Walk East, EC3R
Rolls Buildings, EC4A Rolls Buildings is a block on Rolls Buildings (City of London)
Rolls Buildings, EC4A
Rolls Passage, WC2A Rolls Passage is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Rolls Passage, WC2A
Rood Lane, EC3M Rood Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3M postal area (City of London)
Rood Lane, EC3M
Rose Street, EC4M Rose Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Rose Street, EC4M
Royal Court, EC3V Royal Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Royal Court, EC3V
Royal Exchange Avenue, EC2R Royal Exchange Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Royal Exchange Avenue, EC2R
Royal Exchange Buildings, EC3V Royal Exchange Buildings is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Royal Exchange Buildings, EC3V
Royal Exchange Steps, EC2R Royal Exchange Steps is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Royal Exchange Steps, EC2R
Royal Exchange, EC3V Royal Exchange is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
Royal Exchange, EC3V
Russia Row, EC2V Russia Row is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Russia Row, EC2V
Saddlers House, EC2V Saddlers House can be found on Gutter Lane (City of London)
Saddlers House, EC2V
Salesforce Tower, EC2N Salesforce Tower is a block on Bishopsgate (City of London)
Salesforce Tower, EC2N
Salisbury Court, EC4Y Salisbury Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Salisbury Court, EC4Y
Salisbury House, EC2M Salisbury House can be found on London Wall (City of London)
Salisbury House, EC2M
Salisbury Square, EC4Y Salisbury Square is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Salisbury Square, EC4Y
Santander House, EC4M Santander House is a block on Ludgate Hill (City of London)
Santander House, EC4M
Saracen’s Head Yard, EC3N Saracen’s Head Yard was to the south of Aldgate (City of London)
Saracen’s Head Yard, EC3N
Saunderson House, EC1A Saunderson House is a block on Long Lane (City of London)
Saunderson House, EC1A
Seething Lane, EC3R Seething Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3N postal area (City of London)
Seething Lane, EC3R
Senator House, EC4V Senator House is a block on Queen Victoria Street (City of London)
Senator House, EC4V
Serjeants Inn, EC4Y Serjeants Inn is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Serjeants Inn, EC4Y
Shield House, EC2M Shield House is a block on New Street (City of London)
Shield House, EC2M
Ship Tavern Passage, EC3M Ship Tavern Passage is a City of London alleyway (City of London)
Ship Tavern Passage, EC3M
Shoe Lane, EC4A Shoe Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Shoe Lane, EC4A
Silver Street, EC2V Silver Street was the location of a house in which William Shakespeare lived during his time in London (City of London)
Silver Street, EC2V
Sir John Lyon House, EC4V Sir John Lyon House can be found on High Timber Street (City of London)
Sir John Lyon House, EC4V
Sky Garden, EC3M Sky Garden is a location in London (City of London)
Sky Garden, EC3M
Smithfield Street, EC1A Smithfield Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Smithfield Street, EC1A
Snow Hill, EC1A Snow Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC1A postal area (City of London)
Snow Hill, EC1A
St Alphage Garden, EC2Y St Alphage Garden is one of the streets of London in the EC2Y postal area (City of London)
St Alphage Garden, EC2Y
St Alphage Highwalk, EC2V St Alphage Highwalk is part of the Barbican (City of London)
St Alphage Highwalk, EC2V
St Andrew Street, EC4A St Andrew Street is the northern extension of Shoe Lane (City of London)
St Andrew Street, EC4A
St Andrew’s House, EC1N St Andrew’s House is a block on St Andrew Street (City of London)
St Andrew’s House, EC1N
St Andrew’s House, EC4V St Andrew’s House is a block on St Andrew’s Hill (City of London)
St Andrew’s House, EC4V
St Andrews Hill, EC4V St Andrews Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
St Andrews Hill, EC4V
St Ann’s Lane, EC2V St Ann’s Lane was the name for the west end of Gresham Street until the 1860s (City of London)
St Ann’s Lane, EC2V
St Bride Street, EC4A St Bride Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
St Bride Street, EC4A
St Brides Avenue, EC4Y St Brides Avenue is a narrow alley which leaves Fleet Street almost opposite Shoe Lane (City of London)
St Brides Avenue, EC4Y
St Clement’s House, EC4N St Clement’s House is a block on Clement’s Lane (City of London)
St Clement’s House, EC4N
St Dunstans Hill, EC3R St Dunstans Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
St Dunstans Hill, EC3R
St Georges Lane, EC3R St Georges Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
St Georges Lane, EC3R
St Helen’s Place, EC3A St Helen’s Place runs east from Bishopsgate (City of London)
St Helen’s Place, EC3A
St James’s Passage, EC3N St James’s Passage was formerly known as Church Passage (City of London)
St James’s Passage, EC3N
St James’s Place, EC3A St James’s Place was an open square, formerly Broad Court, which held a daily market that sold fruits of various kinds. (City of London)
St James’s Place, EC3A
St Magnus House, EC3 St Magnus House is a block on Lower Thames Street (City of London)
St Magnus House, EC3
St Martin’s Le Grand, EC2V St Martin’s Le Grand is a street north of Newgate Street and a former liberty within the City of London (City of London)
St Martin’s Le Grand, EC2V
St Mary Abchurch House, EC4N St Mary Abchurch House is a block on Cannon Street (City of London)
St Mary Abchurch House, EC4N
St Mary At Hill, EC3R St Mary At Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC3R postal area (City of London)
St Mary At Hill, EC3R
St Mary Axe, EC3A St Mary Axe is an ancient street of the City of London (City of London)
St Mary Axe, EC3A
St Michaels Alley, EC3V St Michael’s Alley was the centre of the 17th century London coffee house phenomenon (City of London)
St Michaels Alley, EC3V
St Michaels Rectory, EC3V St Michaels Rectory is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
St Michaels Rectory, EC3V
St Paul’s Alley, EC4M St Paul’s Alley largely disappeared from the map when Paternoster Row was built (City of London)
St Paul’s Alley, EC4M
St Paul’s Churchyard, EC4M By the beginning of the sixteenth century, St. Paul’s Churchyard was the chief centre of the book trade, not only for London, but for the whole country. (City of London)
St Paul’s Churchyard, EC4M
St Swithin’s Lane, EC4N St Swithin’s Lane runs from King William Street to Cannon Street (City of London)
St Swithin’s Lane, EC4N
St. Mary’s Grove, EC3A Jeffrey’s Square disappeared under the St Mary Axe development (City of London)
St. Mary’s Grove, EC3A
Stanley Cohen House, EC1Y Stanley Cohen House is a block on Golden Lane (City of London)
Stanley Cohen House, EC1Y
Staple Hall, EC3A Staple Hall is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Staple Hall, EC3A
Staple Inn Buildings, WC1V Staple Inn Buildings is part of historic Staple Inn (City of London)
Staple Inn Buildings, WC1V
Staple Inn Buildings, WC1X Staple Inn Buildings is one of the streets of London in the WC1V postal area (City of London)
Staple Inn Buildings, WC1X
Stationers Hall Court, EC4M Stationers Hall Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Stationers Hall Court, EC4M
Sterling House, EC1N Sterling House can be found on Holborn (City of London)
Sterling House, EC1N
Stew Lane, EC4V Stew Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Stew Lane, EC4V
Stock Exchange Building, EC2N Stock Exchange Building is one of the streets of London in the EC2N postal area (City of London)
Stock Exchange Building, EC2N
Stock Exchange Tower, EC2N Stock Exchange Tower is a building on Old Broad Street (City of London)
Stock Exchange Tower, EC2N
Stone House Court, EC3A Stone House Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Stone House Court, EC3A
Stonecutter Street, EC4A Stonecutter Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Stonecutter Street, EC4A
Stoney Lane, EC3A Stoney Lane is one of the streets of London in the E1 postal area (City of London)
Stoney Lane, EC3A
Strand, EC4A This is a street in the EC4A postcode area (City of London)
Strand, EC4A
Suffolk Lane, EC4R Suffolk Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Suffolk Lane, EC4R
Sugarloaf Court, EC3A Sugarloaf Court leads south off Leadenhall Street (City of London)
Sugarloaf Court, EC3A
Sun Street, EC2M Sun Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Sun Street, EC2M
Swan Lane, EC4R Swan Lane is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Swan Lane, EC4R
Swedbank House, EC2M Swedbank House is a block on New Broad Street (City of London)
Swedbank House, EC2M
Sycamore Street, EC1Y Sycamore Street is one of the streets of London in the EC1Y postal area (City of London)
Sycamore Street, EC1Y
Talbot Court, EC3V Talbot Court was next to the Talbot Inn until the Great Fire of London (City of London)
Talbot Court, EC3V
Tallis House 2 Tallis Street, EC4Y Tallis House 2 Tallis Street is a location in London (City of London)
Tallis House 2 Tallis Street, EC4Y
Tallis House, EC4Y Tallis House is a block on Tallis Street (City of London)
Tallis House, EC4Y
Tallis Street, EC4Y This street honours Thomas Tallis, composer whose name is engraved on the façade of the nearby former building of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama (City of London)
Tallis Street, EC4Y
Technico House, EC2A Technico House is located on Christopher Street (City of London)
Technico House, EC2A
Telegraph Street, EC2R Telegraph Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Telegraph Street, EC2R
Temple Avenue, EC4Y Temple Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Temple Avenue, EC4Y
Temple Bar House, EC4Y Temple Bar House is a block on Fleet Street (City of London)
Temple Bar House, EC4Y
Temple Chambers, EC4Y Temple Chambers is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Temple Chambers, EC4Y
Temple Gardens, EC4Y Temple Gardens is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Temple Gardens, EC4Y
Temple House, EC4Y Temple House is a block on Temple Avenue (City of London)
Temple House, EC4Y
Thavies Inn House, EC1N Thavies Inn House is a block on New Fetter Lane (City of London)
Thavies Inn House, EC1N
The Arcade, EC2A The Arcade is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
The Arcade, EC2A
The Broadgate Tower, EC2A A street within the EC2A postcode (City of London)
The Broadgate Tower, EC2A
The Courtyard, EC3V The Courtyard is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
The Courtyard, EC3V
The Leadenhall Building, EC3 The Leadenhall Building is located on Leadenhall Street (City of London)
The Leadenhall Building, EC3
The Leadenhall Building, EC3M The Leadenhall Building is a block on Leadenhall Street (City of London)
The Leadenhall Building, EC3M
The Monument Building, EC3R The Monument Building is a block on Monument Street (City of London)
The Monument Building, EC3R
The Walbrook Building, EC4N The Walbrook Building is a building on Walbrook (City of London)
The Walbrook Building, EC4N
Thomas Ford House, EC1A Thomas Ford House is a block on Smithfield Street (City of London)
Thomas Ford House, EC1A
Threadneedle Street, EC2N Threadneedle Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2R postal area (City of London)
Threadneedle Street, EC2N
Threadneedle Street, EC3V Threadneedle Street is the location of the Bank of England and Royal Exchange (City of London)
Threadneedle Street, EC3V
Three Barrels Walk, EC4V Three Barrels Walk is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Three Barrels Walk, EC4V
Three Cranes Wharf, EC4R Three Cranes Wharf is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Three Cranes Wharf, EC4R
Three Nun Court, EC2V Three Nun Court is one of the streets of London in the EC2V postal area (City of London)
Three Nun Court, EC2V
Throgmorton Avenue, EC2N Throgmorton Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC2N postal area (City of London)
Throgmorton Avenue, EC2N
Throgmorton Street, EC3V The name of Throgmorton Street is a corruption of the name of Nicholas Throckmorton, Elizabeth I’s ambassador to France and Scotland. (City of London)
Throgmorton Street, EC3V
Tokenhouse Yard, EC2R Tokenhouse Yard marked the site of the manufacturer of tokens that were used as the copper coinage of England before the reign of James I (City of London)
Tokenhouse Yard, EC2R
Took’s Court, EC4A Took’s Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Took’s Court, EC4A
Trig Lane, EC4V A street within the EC4V postcode (City of London)
Trig Lane, EC4V
Tudor Street, EC4Y Tudor Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Tudor Street, EC4Y
Turnagain Lane, EC4A Turnagain Lane is an ancient thoroughfare in the City of London. (City of London)
Turnagain Lane, EC4A
Undershaft, EC3P Undershaft is a road in the EC3P postcode area (City of London)
Undershaft, EC3P
Unilever House, EC4Y Unilever House is a block on Victoria Embankment (City of London)
Unilever House, EC4Y
Union Court, EC2N Union Court is an alleyway off of Broad Street (City of London)
Union Court, EC2N
Upper Cheapside Passage, EC2V A street within the EC2V postcode (City of London)
Upper Cheapside Passage, EC2V
Upper Thames Street, EC4R Upper Thames Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4R postal area (City of London)
Upper Thames Street, EC4R
Upper Thames Street, EC4V Upper Thames Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Upper Thames Street, EC4V
Vestry House, EC1A Vestry House is a block on Greyfriars Passage (City of London)
Vestry House, EC1A
Vestry House, EC4R Residential block (City of London)
Vestry House, EC4R
Victoria Embankment, EC4Y Victoria Embankment is part of the Thames Embankment scheme of 19th-century civil engineering that reclaimed land next to the River Thames (City of London)
Victoria Embankment, EC4Y
Vine Street, EC3N Vine Street is one of the streets of London in the EC3N postal area (City of London)
Vine Street, EC3N
Walbrook, EC4N Walbrook is one of the streets of the Bank area (City of London)
Walbrook, EC4N
Wardrobe Place, EC4V Wardrobe Place is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
Wardrobe Place, EC4V
Warnford Court, EC2N Warnford Court is one of the streets of London in the EC2N postal area (City of London)
Warnford Court, EC2N
Warwick Lane, EC4M This is a street in the EC4P postcode area (City of London)
Warwick Lane, EC4M
Warwick Square, EC4M Warwick Square is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Warwick Square, EC4M
Watergate, EC4Y Watergate is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Watergate, EC4Y
Watling Street, EC4M Watling Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Watling Street, EC4M
Watling Street, EC4N Watling Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4N postal area (City of London)
Watling Street, EC4N
Well Court, EC4N Well Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4M postal area (City of London)
Well Court, EC4N
West Smithfield, EC1A West Smithfield is the oldest street of the Smithfield area (City of London)
West Smithfield, EC1A
White Kennett Street, EC3A White Kennett Street was named after a Bishop of Peterborough (City of London)
White Kennett Street, EC3A
White Lion Court, EC2R White Lion Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3V postal area (City of London)
White Lion Court, EC2R
White Lion Hill, EC4V White Lion Hill is one of the streets of London in the EC4V postal area (City of London)
White Lion Hill, EC4V
Whitecross Place, EC2M Whitecross Place is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Whitecross Place, EC2M
Whitefriars Street, EC4Y Whitefriars Street is one of the streets of London in the EC4Y postal area (City of London)
Whitefriars Street, EC4Y
Whittington Avenue, EC3A Whittington Avenue is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Whittington Avenue, EC3A
Whttington House, EC4R Whttington House can be found on College Hill (City of London)
Whttington House, EC4R
Willis Building, EC3M Willis Building is a block on Lime Street (City of London)
Willis Building, EC3M
Wilson Street, EC2M Wilson Street is one of the streets of London in the EC2M postal area (City of London)
Wilson Street, EC2M
Windsor House, EC2V Windsor House is a block on King Street (City of London)
Windsor House, EC2V
Wine Office Court, EC4A Wine Office Court is one of the streets of London in the EC4A postal area (City of London)
Wine Office Court, EC4A
Wood Street, EC2V Wood Street was originally the main north–south route through the Roman Fort, discovered after Second World War bombing. (City of London)
Wood Street, EC2V
Wrestlers Court, EC3A Wrestlers Court is one of the streets of London in the EC3A postal area (City of London)
Wrestlers Court, EC3A
XL House, EC3V XL House is a block on Gracechurch Street (City of London)
XL House, EC3V
York House, EC4N York House is located on Queen Victoria Street (City of London)
York House, EC4N

NEARBY PUBS



Agenda
Agenda
All Bar One
All Bar One
All Bar One Bishopsgate
All Bar One Bishopsgate
All Bar One Houndsditch
All Bar One Houndsditch
All Bar One Monument
All Bar One Monument
Babble City
Babble City
Balls Brothers @ Minster Court
Balls Brothers @ Minster Court
Balls Brothers Austin Friars
Balls Brothers Austin Friars
Balls Brothers Ltd
Balls Brothers Ltd
Balls Brothers, Mark Lane
Balls Brothers, Mark Lane
Bar 20
Bar 20
Be At One
Be At One
Bedales Wine Bar
Bedales Wine Bar
Best Mangal Bar & Restaurant
Best Mangal Bar & Restaurant
Bierschenke Bierkellar
Bierschenke Bierkellar
Bishops Finger
Bishops Finger
Bottlescrue
Bottlescrue
Brokers Wine Bar
Brokers Wine Bar
Browns
Browns
Charterhouse Bar
Charterhouse Bar
City Flogger
City Flogger
City Golf & Health Clubs
City Golf & Health Clubs
Coach & Horses The Coach & Horses was situated at 71 Bartholomew Close in Smithfield.
Coach & Horses
Core
Core
Corney & Barrow Wine Bars
Corney & Barrow Wine Bars
Corney & Barrow, Unit 3, Stock Exch
Corney & Barrow, Unit 3, Stock Exch
Crab Tavern
Crab Tavern
Craft Beer Co
Craft Beer Co
Crosse Keys
Crosse Keys
Dado 54
Dado 54
Davy’s
Davy’s
Davys, 1 Plantation Place
Davys, 1 Plantation Place
Dirty Martini Monument
Dirty Martini Monument
East India Arms
East India Arms
El Vino Blackfriars
El Vino Blackfriars
El Vino Fleet Street El Vino Fleet Street
El Vino Fleet Street
Forge Bar & Club
Forge Bar & Club
Fox Fine Wines
Fox Fine Wines
Goodman City Ltd
Goodman City Ltd
Grand Union
Grand Union
Grand Union Farringdon
Grand Union Farringdon
Hamilton Hall
Hamilton Hall
Hand & Shears
Hand & Shears
Harrild and Sons
Harrild and Sons
Harry’s Bar
Harry’s Bar
Harry’s Bar
Harry’s Bar
Harry’s Bar & Pizzeria
Harry’s Bar & Pizzeria
Inn of Court
Inn of Court
Jamaica Wine House
Jamaica Wine House
Jamie’s Wine Bar and Restaurant
Jamie’s Wine Bar and Restaurant
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies
Jamies St Mary At Hill
Jamies St Mary At Hill
Kanaloa
Kanaloa
Karaoke Box
Karaoke Box
La Tasca
La Tasca
Le Paris Grill
Le Paris Grill
Lloyds Club Limited
Lloyds Club Limited
Loose Cannon
Loose Cannon
Magpie & Stump The Magpie and Stump is situated at 18 Old Bailey, EC4.
Magpie & Stump
Merchant House
Merchant House
Mermaid Tavern The Mermaid Tavern was a notable tavern during the Elizabethan era.
Mermaid Tavern
Mermaid Theatre
Mermaid Theatre
Number 25
Number 25
Old Dick Whittington The Dick Whittington Inn at 24 Cloth Fair was a sixteenth century building and once part of a row of medieval buildings lining the street.
Old Dick Whittington
Old Red Cow
Old Red Cow
Old Swan The Old Swan Inn was one of the most well-known in the City of London.
Old Swan
One Under Lime
One Under Lime
Oriole
Oriole
Oyster Shed
Oyster Shed
Patch
Patch
Pause
Pause
Pegasus Bar
Pegasus Bar
Piano Smithfield
Piano Smithfield
Planet Of The Grapes
Planet Of The Grapes
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Pub location
Punch Tavern
Punch Tavern
Quarter Jacks, Grange St Pauls Hotel
Quarter Jacks, Grange St Pauls Hotel
Reflex
Reflex
Revolution
Revolution
River Gardens The Moniker is a bar in the City of London.
River Gardens
Roma
Roma
Runnymede
Runnymede
Salotto 31
Salotto 31
Searcy’s Champagne Bar
Searcy’s Champagne Bar
Secrets
Secrets
Shaws Booksellers
Shaws Booksellers
Sir John Hawkshaw
Sir John Hawkshaw
Slug and Lettuce
Slug and Lettuce
Slug and Lettuce
Slug and Lettuce
Slug and Lettuce
Slug and Lettuce
St Brides Tavern
St Brides Tavern
Steam Wine Bar
Steam Wine Bar
Tapster This is a bar in Liverpool Street station.
Tapster
The Albion
The Albion
The Alice
The Alice
The Anthologist
The Anthologist
The Arbitrager
The Arbitrager
The Banker
The Banker
The Bell The Bell is on the non-City of London side of Middlesex Street.
The Bell
The Bell
The Bell
The Blackfriar
The Blackfriar
The Bootlegger’s Club Ltd
The Bootlegger’s Club Ltd
The Botanist
The Botanist
The Bridewell Theatre
The Bridewell Theatre
The Bull The Bull dates back to the 17th century and stands on Devonshire Row.
The Bull
The Bunch Of Grapes
The Bunch Of Grapes
The Butcher’s Hook and Cleaver
The Butcher’s Hook and Cleaver
The Centre Page
The Centre Page
The Cock & Woolpack
The Cock & Woolpack
The Cockpit
The Cockpit
The Crown and Sugar Loaf
The Crown and Sugar Loaf
The Crutched Friar
The Crutched Friar
The Draft House
The Draft House
The Draft House
The Draft House
The Duke and Duchess
The Duke and Duchess
The Fable
The Fable
The Fine Line
The Fine Line
The Fleetwood
The Fleetwood
The Folly
The Folly
The Four Sisters Townhouse
The Four Sisters Townhouse
The Fox and Anchor
The Fox and Anchor
The Gable
The Gable
The George The George was at 25 Old Bailey.
The George
The Globe
The Globe
The Golden Fleece
The Golden Fleece
The Green Man
The Green Man
The Grill on the Market
The Grill on the Market
The Hack & Hop
The Hack & Hop
The Harrow
The Harrow
The Hoop & Grapes
The Hoop & Grapes
The Hung Drawn & Quartered
The Hung Drawn & Quartered
The Lord Raglan
The Lord Raglan
The Monument
The Monument
The New Moon
The New Moon
The Old Bell Tavern
The Old Bell Tavern
The Olde Wine Shades
The Olde Wine Shades
The Paternoster
The Paternoster
The Pelt Trader, Arch 3
The Pelt Trader, Arch 3
The Pepys
The Pepys
The Rack & Tenter
The Rack & Tenter
The Red Lion
The Red Lion
The Rising Sun
The Rising Sun
The Rising Sun
The Rising Sun
The Saint
The Saint
The Shakespeare
The Shakespeare
The Ship
The Ship
The Ship
The Ship
The Sterling
The Sterling
The Sugarloaf
The Sugarloaf
The Swan
The Swan
The Telegraph
The Telegraph
The Three Cranes
The Three Cranes
The Tokenhouse The Tokenhouse is named for the nearby manufacturer of tokens that were used as the copper coinage of England before the 1680s.
The Tokenhouse
The Vintry
The Vintry
The Walrus & The Carpenter
The Walrus & The Carpenter
The White Swan
The White Swan
Three Tuns
Three Tuns
Tipperary
Tipperary
Unknown as yet
Unknown as yet
Unknown as yet
Unknown as yet
Vertigo 42
Vertigo 42
Viaduct Tavern Have a pint at the Viaduct Tavern - a fine old gin palace, with fine mahogany and brass fittings, art nouveau paintings and lincrusta ceilings.
Viaduct Tavern
Vino & Vino
Vino & Vino
Voltaire, Crowne Plaza Hotel
Voltaire, Crowne Plaza Hotel
White Horse
White Horse
Willys Wine Bar
Willys Wine Bar
Wine Lodge
Wine Lodge
Wood Street Bar and Restaurant
Wood Street Bar and Restaurant
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese
Ye Olde Cock Tavern
Ye Olde Cock Tavern
Ye Olde London
Ye Olde London
Ye Olde Watling
Ye Olde Watling
Zorita’s Kitchen
Zorita’s Kitchen


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