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SIX
ALONG THE STRAND: AND A PEEP AT COVENT GARDEN AND THE COFFEE HOUSES WHERE Temple Bar Memorial, surmounted by a Griffin, is now in the Strand Temple Bar itself stood until 1878. In one form or another, at times merely a wooden structure, Temple Bar defined the limits of the City from the 14th century. To the very last of its days was preserved an ancient custom of closing the gate when a sovereign approached the City on any public occasion, and opening it with much ceremony to give entrance way. The last Temple Bar was built in 1670, but was demolished to facilitate traffic. On the top of the old gateway the heads of criminals who had been executed were exposed. The Strand probably
the best known street in the world to-day was once a royal road outlining the
water-side. On one side were the castles of noblemen fronting on the river,
with gardens between, and state barges carried the courtiers to the Tower, to
Richmond or to Westminster wherever the king was to be found. The chief castle
belonged to Peter of Savoy uncle of Henry III., and was set in the midst of an
estate granted by the king in 1245. In those days the bishops were the
principal owners of palaces on the Strand—the courtiers preferring the City as
being safer from the attacks of their enemies. But the bishops were regarded as
sacred and could live anywhere they pleased unmolested. The Strand became a
regular thoroughfare about 1560. At the time of the
Reformation the palace of Walter Stapleton Bishop of Exeter was on the south,
or river, side of the Strand and was called Exeter House. Afterward when the
Earl of Essex, Elizabeth's favourite lived there it was called Essex House for
him and the present Essex Street so gets its name. The only tangible survival
of Essex House is at the end of the street—the aged and picturesque Water Gate,
with the worn stone stairs that once led directly to the water where the barges
received visitors from the palace. It was down these stairs that the Earl of
Essex was taken on his way to the Tower to be beheaded at the command of the fickle
queen. In Essex Street
just where is now an entrance into New Court stood the tavern of the Essex
Head. Here, in 1783, Samuel Johnson then suffering from the diseases which
caused his death in the next year established a conversation club that was to
meet three times a week. Johnson attended regularly as long as he was able to
walk from his home not far away in Bolt Court. Opposite Essex
Street in the middle of the Strand is the church of St. Clement Danes, designed
by Sir Christopher Wren in 1681. At this church Dr. Johnson was a regular
attendant for years and the pew he sat in, No. 18 in the north gallery, is
marked with a tablet telling of "the philosopher, the poet, the great
lexicographer, the profound moralist and chief writer of his times." Joe
Miller, the man of jokes, was buried here, and his epitaph records among other
things that he was a facetious companion, a sincere friend and a tender
husband, which is about all a man need be. In the 16th century
the Bishop of Bath's palace was on the river side of the Strand. It was called
Arundel House and gave its name to Arundel Street. Norfolk Street, now
a quiet thoroughfare of private hotels, is where at No. 21 Dickens located
"Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings." In the first house from the river on the
west side Peter the Great of Russia lived when he came to London in 1698 on the
invitation of William III., to make a personal study of British industrial
pursuits, military art, science and trade, a study which he did make, carrying
back to Russia with him more than five hundred artisans, surgeons, artificers
and engineers. In Surrey Street
the dramatist William Congreve who has been called the greatest English master
of pure comedy lived at the height of his success, long after "The Old
Bachelor," "Love for Love" and "The Mourning Bride"
had made him famous, and here he died. Placed squarely in
the centre of the Strand opposite Somerset House, forming a cross current in
the rush of traffic, stands the church of St. Mary-le-Strand, since 1717. It is
on the spot of an old Maypole and bears the name of an older church demolished
to make room for Somerset House. The Maypole was set up originally in 1601 to
honour the wife of General Monk. In the open space
to the west of the church of St. Mary-le-Strand, in 1634, the first cab stand
in London was established. In the narrow
Strand Lane opposite the church of St. Mary-le-Strand is the framework of an
ancient Roman bath. It is one of the few survivals of Roman London and has been
here for fifteen hundred years. Water still flows into it from a hidden spring
and it is well worth passing through the door of No. 5 Strand Lane to look upon
this relic and to be assured that the days of Boadicea were real. ENTRANCE TO OLD ROMAN BATH, STRAND LANE The great inner
square of the present Somerset House covers vaults built into the cellars
forming tombs in which lie many a favourite of King James I. and King Charles
I. But though the building has the same name all else is changed and it is not
the same Somerset House which represented the height of political and kingly
grandeur. At the time of the Reformation on the Strand by the river were
palaces of the Bishops of Landaff, Chester and Worcester, and these palaces
were torn down by "The Protector " the Earl of Somerset uncle of
Edward VI. On their site in 1549 he had Somerset House built. But the lives of
nobles were brief in those days and Somerset was beheaded in 1552 before the
completion of his palace which became Crown property. James I. gave the mansion
to his queen Anne of Denmark and she called it Denmark House. When Charles I.
came to the throne Queen Henrietta Maria lived in Somerset's palace and liked
it so well it was her home for many years. In the reign of Charles II.,
Somerset House passed to Queen Catherine of Braganza. It was here that Inigo
Jones died, and here that at different times lay in state the bodies of Anne of
Denmark, James I. and Oliver Cromwell. In 1775 when Buckingham House in St.
James' Park was purchased for Queen Charlotte, wife of George III., to replace
Somerset, the home of many famous folk was destroyed. Then the present
structure was erected and since that time has been used for various offices of
State, requiring an army of Government clerks and officials. Midway between the
Strand and the river, closed in by buildings and reached by winding ways of
which Savoy Street is one, is the Savoy Church, the only reminder of the great
palace which stood in this domain of the House of Savoy. In 1246 Henry III.
granted to his wife's uncle Peter of Savoy certain land along the Thames- On
this land Peter of Savoy built a palace outside the City walls between the road
called the Strand and the River Thames. When he died in 1268, bequeathing his
Palace of Savoy in London to the reverent friars of Montjoy, they in turn sold
the palace to Queen Eleanor. She left it to her son Edmund of Lancaster. After
that it became the headquarters of the Duchy of Lancaster and is much to be
read of until 1381 when it was destroyed by the followers of Wat Tyler. Henry
IV. came into possession of the Duchy of Lancaster on the death of John of
Gaunt and in this roundabout way the present Savoy Church became a "
Chapel Royal." From 1381 the year of its demolishment until 1509 it was
little more than a ruin. In 1509 Henry VII. founded a hospital for the poor on
the site—a group of buildings directly on the river. This was finally dissolved
in 1702, and the buildings, used for various purposes, gradually vanished until
now only the chapel remains. This has been restored many times but much of it
is the same—part of the Lancastrian palace of Savoy. A great modern
hostelry, the Savoy Hotel, stands on part of the site of the old Palace of
Savoy and the statue over the entrance is that of Count Peter of Savoy former
owner of the palace. On the north side
of the Strand between Burleigh and Exeter streets and on ground now occupied by
a popular restaurant was Exeter House, the home of the great statesman William
Cecil, Lord Burleigh. Queen Elizabeth visited here and on his explaining that
he was unable to stand in her presence, "because of the badness of my
legs," the queen graciously replied : "We do not make use of you, My
Lord, for the badness of your legs, but for the goodness of your head."
The famous Exeter Hall occupied this site later, but was demolished in 1908. In York Street,
laid out in the 17th century, on the south side at No. 4 Thomas De Quincey
lived and wrote "The Confessions of an English Opium-Eater;" a
gruesome chronicle much read and said to be partly autobiographical. A sadness
seems to hang about the place, especially when it is "To be Let,"
with gaping windows and desolate brick front. For a century Bow
Street has been closely associated with the chief police court of London where
many famous criminals have ended their days of liberty. Wycherley the dramatist
lived here, when he lay ill, and Charles II. came to him and gave him the five
hundred pounds that took him to the south of France in search of health. Grinling Gibbons,
also had his home in Bow Street. A remarkable carver in wood, whose work adorns
many of the London church interiors, he was an unknown worker in a small
English town when John Evelyn the 17th century writer and diarist discovered
him and placed his work before King Charles II. But in London Gibbons' art was
not at first recognized and he had a struggle for existence. In time however he
became master carver to the Court, an appointment which lasted until the reign
of George I. The subjects of his carvings were usually flowers, foliage, birds
and lace and they are remarkable for their delicacy of finish and naturalness.
He also finished many works in bronze and marble. In a house standing
where the Bow Street police station is now Henry Fielding wrote "Tom
Jones" in 1749,—a story famous as a picture of the times and undoubtedly
containing much autobiography. At the northwest
corner of Russell Street where it touches Bow, stood Will's Coffee House, where
from 1660 on for fifty years the literary life of London centred. The coffee
house was named for William Urwin, the original owner. Dryden spent his dinner
hours here for 35 years and was the acknowledged leader of literary fashion
until his death in 1700. This, too, was the favourite house of Wycherley and
Congreve the dramatists. To-day on the site
of Will's Coffee House stands the old home of Charles and Mary Lamb, where was
written the first series of the "Essays of Elia." Russell Street is a
place of wholesale fruit and vegetable dealers now, but there are signs of
old-time pleasantness to be found, especially in the delightful cornices over
many of the windows. Opposite Will's,
Button's Coffee House was established in 1712, presided over by Addison's old
servant Daniel Button. As Will's was a place for literary controversy, Button's
was first of all ground for the discussion of matters political. Joseph Addison
was the recognized head of the coterie who met there, among whom were Alexander
Pope, Ambrose Philips, Thomas Tickell, Henry Carey, Richard Steele and Richard
Savage. One faithful habitué was a playwright named Charles Johnson, whose fame
rested chiefly on the fact that for many years he wrote a play every season and
went to Button's every day. Steele, then editing the "Guardian," was
so constant in his attendance that he used the rooms as his editorial office,
setting up a lion's head, into the mouth of which correspondents deposited
communications to which Steele replied in the pages of the
"Guardian." Button the proprietor died in 1730 in great poverty and
was buried in the churchyard of St. Paul's, Covent Garden, at the expense of
the parish. Another celebrated
coffee house was Tom's, on the north side of Russell Street, at No. 17, taking
its name from Thomas West its first proprietor. West killed himself by jumping
from the second story window of the house in 1722 but the business was
continued with considerable success until 1814. Far back in the
13th century all the land about what is now the Covent Garden district was a
real garden, a great fertile tract attached to the convent of the monks of Westminster.
Since those early days it has always been associated with flowers and growing
things and the Covent Garden Market is now the chief flower, fruit and
vegetable market of London. A map of the middle of the 16th century shows it a
tract stretching approximately from the Strand to the Long Acre of to-day and
surrounded by a wall. The Crown granted the land to the Bedfords in 1552, and
in 1621 Inigo Jones planned the Covent Market Square. In 1831 the market
buildings of this day were erected, but they have since been added to and
improved. Under the Piazza in
Covent Garden was Bedford's Coffee House, the successor in popularity to Will's
and Button's. Here gathered David Garrick, Richard Brinsley Sheridan, William
Hogarth, Samuel Foote and Henry Fielding. The house continued a popular
rendezvous until about 1803. On the west side of
Covent Garden, plain, dingy and unkempt in appearance, blending with the
unpleasantness of the streets surrounding the market, is the church of St.
Paul's, Covent Garden. Francis, fifth Earl of Bedford, in the 17th century
owned all the land hereabouts and directed Inigo Jones to build a chapel for
Covent Garden. But, he explained, it must not cost much money—build simply a
barn. And Inigo Jones responded: "It shall be the handsomest barn in
England." And he built St. Paul's. One of the memories associated with it
is the record that here, in 1773, William Turner, the hair-dresser of Maiden
Lane, was married to Mary Marshall. Their son was baptised here in 1775 and afterwards
became the artist Joseph Mallord William Turner. In the forlorn burial ground
back of this church were buried Samuel Butler, author of "Hudibras,"
in 1680; Grinling Gibbons, the wood carver, in 1721, and Edward Kynaston, an
actor of female rôles, in 1712. This actor gained fame not only as a rare
interpreter of character, but on one memorable occasion by keeping King Charles
II. waiting, "because the queen was not yet shaved." William
Wycherley, dramatist and author of "The Country Girl," was laid here
in 1715, and T. A. Arne, composer of "Rule Britannia," in 1778. It is
here, too, that Daniel Button, proprietor of the famous Button's Coffee House
in Russell Street, lies, and others whose names are known all over the world. Close by busy
Covent Garden Market, in the house numbered 27 Southampton Street, David
Garrick the actor lived for more than twenty years. A fanciful tablet over the
doorway reads: David Garrick
Lived Here 1750-1772 Southampton Street
takes its name from the Earl of Southampton, and was the main approach to
Covent Garden in the reign of Charles II. Unattractive Maiden
Lane leading from Southampton Street back of the Adelphi Theatre is narrow and
usually overcrowded with many people and business vehicles. It was in this
street, where the house No. 20 stands, that the great Turner was born in 1775,
his father here having carried on his profession of hairdresser. Voltaire, the
Frenchman, lived in this thoroughfare for a time. In our own times, close by
the stage door of the Adelphi, the actor William Terriss was done to death by a
madman. Claude Duval the
highwayman celebrated in song and story was captured in "The Hole in the
Wall," a well-patronized tavern of the 17th century. It stood in Chandos
Street, the second house from Bedford on the north side of the road. High above Victoria
Embankment, Adelphi Terrace, with Cleopatra's Needle just below by the
riverside, shows a line .of fine old derelict houses whose windows command a
view of the Thames, Waterloo and Charing Cross bridges, and the picturesque
confusion of shipping on the Surrey side so often muffled in fog. In the house
No. 5, Garrick the actor died, and on a tablet are the words: David
Garrick Actor Lived Here B 1716 D 1779 The neighbourhood
is known as The Adelphi. In 1760, four brothers, Scotch architects named Adam,
began laying out the roads, and their names were given to William, Adam, John
and Robert streets. At No. 2 Robert Street lived Thomas Hood, and here he wrote
the "Song of the Shirt." ADELPHI TERRACE Near Buckingham Street
once stood the palace of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, given him by King
James I. Before that, in the time of the Reformation, it had belonged to the
Archbishop of York and was on the south, or river, side of the Strand. The
street is dreary and desolate appearing now. In a house at one end near the old
Water Gate Dickens had Betsy Trotwood engage a room for David Copperfield in
the book of that name. Across the way at the southwest corner overlooking the
river Samuel Pepys lived for many years, and Jean Jacques Rosseau and David
Hume lived together in this street in 1765. In the public
gardens beyond Buckingham Street is the Water Gate of York House, a substantial
relic in the middle of green lawns. It was built by the Duke of Buckingham as the
first stage in the rebuilding of York Palace but the task was never completed. Villiers Street is
a clean and quiet thoroughfare, where people seem to walk sedately as though
strolling through a graveyard. It is named for George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham,
who was a fashionable courtier much beloved by King James I., and who paid
gallant court to Anne of Austria, wife of the French King Louis XIII. The
establishment of Charing Cross Station robbed the street of its western side.
Pepys' companion diarist, John Evelyn, lived hereabouts, and Richard Steele,
too, after the death of his wife. A newspaper office
now occupies Number 149 Strand where Mrs. Siddons the actress passed the night
after her first appearance in London when she captured the town by her art. Charing Cross
railway station stands where was once Hungerford Market, which in 1669 took the
place of the recently burned mansion of Sir Edward Hungerford. On the Villiers
Street side were a line of factories, among them Warren's blacking factory
where Charles Dickens worked as a boy, the scenes and workers of which he
reproduced in "David Copperfield," changing only the character of the
business from blacking to wine. The river then crept up to what is now the
northerly side of the Embankment. At the foot of Villiers Street was the
Hungerford Stairs where passengers landed from the river. There were many of
these "Stairs" along the waterside and two reminders of them may be
seen in Essex and York gates. When King Edward
I., in 1290 journeyed from Lincoln to Westminster Abbey with the body of his
beloved Queen, Eleanor of Castile, he rested the coffin on the spot now called
Charing Cross. Some say the name Charing was an alteration of Chère Reine (dear
queen), but the locality was so called before Edward's day so this cannot be
verified. Charing was a little settlement that lay in the fields between London
and Westminster and was at first called Cherringe. At all events, in the year
after Eleanor's body had rested here Edward erected a memorial cross of Gothic
design—which has since then been called Eleanor's Cross—to mark where the
coffin had rested, one of nine similar monuments commemorating the various
stages of the journey. In successive reigns, for almost four hundred years,
Eleanor's Cross was alternately defaced, reinstated or repaired, on the
occasion of coronations or visits of royalty. Finally Parliament had it removed
in 1647, but a modern copy of it stands to-day in the courtyard of the Charing
Cross railway station. Across the road
from Charing Cross railway station Golden Cross Hotel preserves the name of a
famous place in old stage-coach days. The original house of this name stood on
the site now held by the Nelson Column. In front of the original tavern, Mr.
Pickwick of "Pickwick Papers" and his friends met Alfred Jingle for
the first time and from here the entire party took the coach for Rochester. At
this tavern, David Copperfield met Steerforth, some years after their school
days together, when Copperfield had been put "into a small bedchamber,
which smelt like a hackney-coach, and was shut up like a family vault." Where Drummond's
Bank is, at Charing Cross, once stood the celebrated tavern "Locket's
Ordinary," where Thackeray in the novel "Henry Esmond," placed
the dispute between Lord Mohun and Lord Castlewood ending at Leicester Fields
and in the killing of the patron of Esmond. Just beyond Northumberland is Craven Street one of the lonely ways leading from the busy Strand to the river. On the house No. 7 is a tablet reading: Lived Here
Benjamin Franklin Printer Philosopher and Statesman Born 1706 Died 1790 In this street too,
in Craven Buildings, in the time of William and Mary, dwelt charming Mrs.
Bracegirdle who was called the Diana of the stage, and in the same house lived
another actress, Madame Vestris. No. 8 is supposed to be the house in which
lived Scrooge, of Scrooge and Marley, in Dickens' "Christmas Carol."
On the door is the knocker pointed out as the one Scrooge looked at on
Christmas Eve, imagining it looked like the face of Marley. Where the Grand
Hotel stands in Northumberland Avenue by Trafalgar Square was once
Northumberland House. This was one of the Strand palaces begun by Henry Howard,
Earl of Northumberland in 1602. For more than two hundred years it was the home
of the Northumberland family and at the time of its demolishment it was looked
upon as the finest historical house in London. Leading from the
Strand, close by, is Northumberland Street, called Hortshorne Lane when Ben
Jonson lived here with his mother and his step-father the bricklayer who wanted
Jonson to follow the bricklaying trade. Here he still lived when he came to be
known as the great wit, poet and scholar and the friend of Shakespeare, Bacon
and Raleigh. The statue of Lord
Nelson and the four British lions guard Trafalgar Square, where are also
statues of Napier, Havelock and Gordon. There is, too, an equestrian figure of
George IV. It is told of this king that when he was Prince of Wales he would
insist that he had taken part in the Battle of Waterloo, whither he pretended
he had gone secretly. He used often to say to the Duke of Wellington, "I
was there, wasn't I, Arthur?" To which the duke would invariably reply
discreetly: "I have frequently heard Your Royal Highness say so."
This statue was to have been placed on the marble arch at Buckingham Palace but
was found to be too large so was set up in the square instead. The statue of
Charles I. in this square was originally placed close by the church in Covent
Garden in 1633 until the Civil War when Parliament sold it to a brasier who was
told to break it up. The brasier, however, buried it, and when Charles II.
succeeded to the throne at the Restoration it was dug up and placed on a
pedestal designed by Grinling Gibbons and set up where it is now. Trafalgar
Square was, in 1829, an open space at Charing Cross where St. Martin's Lane,
the Strand, Cockspur Street, Pall Mall, Whitehall and Northumberland Avenue
came to a point. The 145 foot pillar crowned with the statue of Lord Nelson
commemorates his death at the Battle of Trafalgar Bay in 1805. The columns of the façade of the National Gallery were taken from the Carlton House when that historic palace was demolished in 1827. TRAFALGAR SQUARE |