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Hammersmith

Hammersmith is a district of West London, England, 4.3 miles (6.9 km) southwest of Charing Cross. It is the administrative centre of the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, and identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London.

Hammersmith

Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith
Hammersmith
Location within Greater London
Population95,996 (2020)[1]
OS grid referenceTQ233786
• Charing Cross4.3 mi (6.9 km) ENE
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLONDON
Postcode districtW6 W14
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°29′34″N 0°13′22″W / 51.4928°N 0.2229°W / 51.4928; -0.2229Coordinates: 51°29′34″N 0°13′22″W / 51.4928°N 0.2229°W / 51.4928; -0.2229

It is bordered by Shepherd's Bush to the north, Kensington to the east, Chiswick to the west, and Fulham to the south, with which it forms part of the north bank of the River Thames. The area is one of west London's main commercial and employment centres, and has for some decades been a major centre of London's Polish community. It is a major transport hub for west London, with two London Underground stations and a bus station at Hammersmith Broadway.

Toponymy

Hammersmith may mean "(Place with) a hammer smithy or forge",[2] although, in 1839, Thomas Faulkner proposed that the name derived from two 'Saxon' words: the initial Ham from ham and the remainder from hythe, alluding to Hammersmith's riverside location.[3] In 1922, Gover proposed that the prefix was a personal name, Heahmaer or Hæmar, and stating that the suffix must be Anglo-Saxon from -myðe,[4] meaning the junction of two rivers, as Hammersmith Creek merged with the Thames here.[5]: 36  The earliest spelling is Hamersmyth in 1294, with alternative spellings of Hameresmithe in 1312, Hamyrsmyth in 1535, and Hammersmith 1675.[6]

History

The district was a chapelry of the ancient parish of Fulham, but became a fully independent parish in 1631.[7] In the early 1660s, Hammersmith's first parish church, which later became St Paul's, was built by Sir Nicholas Crispe who ran the brickworks in Hammersmith.[8] It contained a monument to Crispe as well as a bronze bust of King Charles I by Hubert Le Sueur.[9] In 1696 Sir Samuel Morland was buried there. The church was completely rebuilt in 1883, but the monument and bust were transferred to the new church.

In 1745, two Scots, James Lee and Lewis Kennedy, established the Vineyard Nursery, over six acres devoted to landscaping plants. During the next hundred and fifty years the nursery introduced many new plants to England, including fuchsia and the standard rose tree.[10][11]

1804 saw the trial of Francis Smith for the murder of Thomas Millwood in Beaver Lane, Hammersmith. Called the Hammersmith Ghost murder case, it set a unique standard in English legal history.[12]

In 1868, Hammersmith was the name of a parish, and of a suburban district, within the hundred of Ossulstone, in the county of Middlesex.[13] Major industrial sites included the Osram lamp factory at Brook Green, the J. Lyons factory (which at one time employed 30,000 people). During both World Wars, Waring & Gillow's furniture factory, in Cambridge Grove, became the site of aircraft manufacture.

Hammersmith Borough Council had provided the borough with electricity since the early twentieth century from Hammersmith power station. Upon nationalisation of the electricity industry in 1948 ownership passed to the British Electricity Authority and later to the Central Electricity Generating Board. Electricity connections to the national grid rendered the 20 megawatt (MW) coal-fired power station redundant. It closed in 1965; in its final year of operation it delivered 5,462 MWh of electricity to the borough.[14]

Economy

Hammersmith is located at the confluence of one of the arterial routes out of central London (the A4) with several local feeder roads and a bridge over the Thames. The focal point of the district is the commercial centre (the Broadway Centre) located at this confluence, which houses a shopping centre, bus station, an Underground station and an office complex.[citation needed]

 
King Street

Stretching about 750 m (820 yd) westwards from this centre is King Street, Hammersmith's main shopping street. Named after John King, Bishop of London,[15] it contains a second shopping centre (Livat Hammersmith), many small shops, the town hall, the Lyric Theatre, a cinema, the Polish community centre and two hotels. King Street is supplemented by other shops along Shepherds Bush Road to the north, Fulham Palace Road to the south and Hammersmith Road to the east. Hammersmith's office activity takes place mainly to the eastern side of its centre, along Hammersmith Road and in the Ark, an office complex to the south of the flyover which traverses the area.[citation needed]

Charing Cross Hospital on Fulham Palace Road is a large multi-disciplinary NHS hospital with accident & emergency and teaching departments run by the Imperial College School of Medicine.[16]

Architecture

"The Ark" office building, designed by British architect Ralph Erskine and completed in 1992, has some resemblance to the hull of a sailing ship.[17] Hammersmith Bridge Road Surgery was designed by Guy Greenfield.[18]22 St Peter's Square, the former Royal Chiswick Laundry and Island Records HQ, has been converted to architects' studios and offices by Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands. It has a Hammersmith Society Conservation award plaque (2009)[19] and has been included in tours in Architecture Week.[20] Several of Hammersmith's pubs are listed buildings, including the Black Lion,[21] The Dove,[22] The George,[23] The Hop Poles,[24] the Hope and Anchor,[25] the Salutation Inn[26] and The Swan,[27] as are Hammersmith's two parish churches, St Paul's[28] (the town's original church, rebuilt in the 1890s) and St Peter's, built in the 1820s.[29]

Culture and entertainment

 
The Dove public house

Riverside Studios is a cinema, performance space, bar and cafe. Originally film studios, Riverside Studios were used by the BBC from 1954 to 1975 for television productions.[30] The Lyric Hammersmith Theatre is just off King Street. Hammersmith Apollo concert hall and theatre (formerly the Carling Hammersmith Apollo, the Hammersmith Odeon, and before that the Gaumont Cinema) is just south of the gyratory. The former Hammersmith Palais nightclub has been demolished and the site reused as student accommodation.[31] The Polish Social and Cultural Association is on King Street. It contains a theatre, an art gallery and several restaurants. Its library has one of the largest collections of Polish-language books outside Poland.[32][33][34][35][36]

The Dove is a riverside pub with what the Guinness Book of Records listed as the smallest bar room in the world, in 2016 surviving as a small space on the right of the bar.[37] the pub was frequented by Ernest Hemingway and Graham Greene; James Thomson lodged and likely wrote Rule Britannia here.[38] The narrow alley in which it stands is the only remnant of the riverside village of Hammersmith, the bulk of which was demolished in the 1930s. Furnivall Gardens, which lies to the east, covers the site of Hammersmith Creek and the High Bridge.[39]

Leisure activity also takes place along Hammersmith's pedestrianised riverside, home to the pubs of Lower Mall, rowing clubs and the riverside park of Furnival Gardens. Hammersmith has a municipal park, Ravenscourt Park, to the west of the centre. Its facilities include tennis courts, a basketball court, a bowling lawn, a paddling pool, and playgrounds.[40]

 
Lower Mall from the river, with Hammersmith Bridge on the right

Hammersmith is the historical home of the West London Penguin Swimming and Water Polo Club, formerly known as the Hammersmith Penguin Swimming Club.[41] Hammersmith Chess Club has been active in the borough since it was formed in 1962. It was initially based in Westcott Lodge, later moving to St Paul's Church, then to Blythe House and now Lytton Hall, near West Kensington tube station.[42]

Transport

The area is on the main A4 trunk road heading west from central London towards the M4 motorway and Heathrow Airport. The A4, a busy commuter route, passes over the area's main road junction, Hammersmith Gyratory System, on a long viaduct, the Hammersmith Flyover.[43] Hammersmith Bridge closed in August 2020 to pedestrians, cyclists and road traffic, severing the link with Barnes in the southwest. Its cast iron pedestals that hold the suspension system in place had become unsafe.[44]

The centre of Hammersmith is served by two London Underground stations named Hammersmith: one is served by the Hammersmith & City and Circle lines and the other is served by the Piccadilly and District lines. The latter station is part of a larger office, retail and transport development, locally known as "The Broadway Centre". Hammersmith Broadway stretches from the junction of Queen Caroline Street and King Street in the west to the junction of Hammersmith Road and Butterwick in the east. It forms the north side of the gyratory system also known as Hammersmith Roundabout. The Broadway Shopping Centre includes a major bus station. The length of King Street places the westernmost shops and offices closest to Ravenscourt Park Underground station on the District line, one stop west of Hammersmith itself.[citation needed]

Hammersmith Bridge

 
Repair works to the bridge footings, showing air-conditioning and sensors

The first Hammersmith Bridge was designed by William Tierney Clark and opened in 1827 and was the first suspension bridge crossing the River Thames. It was redesigned by Joseph Bazalgette, and reopened in 1887.[8][45] In August 2020, it closed to pedestrians, cyclists and road traffic as the cast iron pedestals that hold the suspension system in place became unsafe. Work began to improve the structural integrity of the bridge in 2022.[44]

In literature and music

Hammersmith features in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations as the home of the Pocket family. Pip resides with the Pockets in their house by the river and goes boating on the river.[46]William Morris's utopian novel News from Nowhere (1890) describes a journey up the river from Hammersmith towards Oxford.[47]

In 1930, Gustav Holst composed Hammersmith, a work for military band (later rewritten for orchestra), reflecting his impressions of the area, having lived across the river in Barnes for nearly forty years.[48] It begins with a haunting musical depiction of the River Thames flowing underneath Hammersmith Bridge. Holst taught music at St Paul's Girls' School and composed many of his most famous works there, including his The Planets suite. A music room in the school is named after him.[49] Holst dedicates Hammersmith: To the Author of "The Water Gypsies." [50]

Notable people

17th century

 

18th century

19th century

 
Eric Gill, typographer

1900–1945

 

1946–2000

 
Bill Bailey, comedian
 

See also

References

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External links

  • London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham
  • Hammersmith's local community web site
  • Description of Hammersmith in 1868 27 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Hammersmith, Fulham and Putney, by Geraldine Edith Mitton and John Cunningham Geikie, 1903, from Project Gutenberg
  • HammersmithLondon Business Improvement District (BID)

hammersmith, this, article, about, district, london, other, uses, disambiguation, district, west, london, england, miles, southwest, charing, cross, administrative, centre, london, borough, fulham, identified, london, plan, major, centres, greater, london, lyr. This article is about the district in London For other uses see Hammersmith disambiguation Hammersmith is a district of West London England 4 3 miles 6 9 km southwest of Charing Cross It is the administrative centre of the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham and identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London HammersmithLyric Theatre HammersmithHammersmithLocation within Greater LondonPopulation95 996 2020 1 OS grid referenceTQ233786 Charing Cross4 3 mi 6 9 km ENELondon boroughHammersmith amp FulhamCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townLONDONPostcode districtW6 W14Dialling code020PoliceMetropolitanFireLondonAmbulanceLondonUK ParliamentHammersmithLondon AssemblyWest CentralList of places UK England London 51 29 34 N 0 13 22 W 51 4928 N 0 2229 W 51 4928 0 2229 Coordinates 51 29 34 N 0 13 22 W 51 4928 N 0 2229 W 51 4928 0 2229It is bordered by Shepherd s Bush to the north Kensington to the east Chiswick to the west and Fulham to the south with which it forms part of the north bank of the River Thames The area is one of west London s main commercial and employment centres and has for some decades been a major centre of London s Polish community It is a major transport hub for west London with two London Underground stations and a bus station at Hammersmith Broadway Hammersmith Town Hall Contents 1 Toponymy 2 History 3 Economy 4 Architecture 5 Culture and entertainment 6 Transport 7 Hammersmith Bridge 8 In literature and music 9 Notable people 9 1 17th century 9 2 18th century 9 3 19th century 9 4 1900 1945 9 5 1946 2000 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksToponymy EditHammersmith may mean Place with a hammer smithy or forge 2 although in 1839 Thomas Faulkner proposed that the name derived from two Saxon words the initial Ham from ham and the remainder from hythe alluding to Hammersmith s riverside location 3 In 1922 Gover proposed that the prefix was a personal name Heahmaer or Haemar and stating that the suffix must be Anglo Saxon from myde 4 meaning the junction of two rivers as Hammersmith Creek merged with the Thames here 5 36 The earliest spelling is Hamersmyth in 1294 with alternative spellings of Hameresmithe in 1312 Hamyrsmyth in 1535 and Hammersmith 1675 6 History EditThe district was a chapelry of the ancient parish of Fulham but became a fully independent parish in 1631 7 In the early 1660s Hammersmith s first parish church which later became St Paul s was built by Sir Nicholas Crispe who ran the brickworks in Hammersmith 8 It contained a monument to Crispe as well as a bronze bust of King Charles I by Hubert Le Sueur 9 In 1696 Sir Samuel Morland was buried there The church was completely rebuilt in 1883 but the monument and bust were transferred to the new church In 1745 two Scots James Lee and Lewis Kennedy established the Vineyard Nursery over six acres devoted to landscaping plants During the next hundred and fifty years the nursery introduced many new plants to England including fuchsia and the standard rose tree 10 11 1804 saw the trial of Francis Smith for the murder of Thomas Millwood in Beaver Lane Hammersmith Called the Hammersmith Ghost murder case it set a unique standard in English legal history 12 In 1868 Hammersmith was the name of a parish and of a suburban district within the hundred of Ossulstone in the county of Middlesex 13 Major industrial sites included the Osram lamp factory at Brook Green the J Lyons factory which at one time employed 30 000 people During both World Wars Waring amp Gillow s furniture factory in Cambridge Grove became the site of aircraft manufacture Hammersmith Borough Council had provided the borough with electricity since the early twentieth century from Hammersmith power station Upon nationalisation of the electricity industry in 1948 ownership passed to the British Electricity Authority and later to the Central Electricity Generating Board Electricity connections to the national grid rendered the 20 megawatt MW coal fired power station redundant It closed in 1965 in its final year of operation it delivered 5 462 MWh of electricity to the borough 14 Economy EditHammersmith is located at the confluence of one of the arterial routes out of central London the A4 with several local feeder roads and a bridge over the Thames The focal point of the district is the commercial centre the Broadway Centre located at this confluence which houses a shopping centre bus station an Underground station and an office complex citation needed King Street Stretching about 750 m 820 yd westwards from this centre is King Street Hammersmith s main shopping street Named after John King Bishop of London 15 it contains a second shopping centre Livat Hammersmith many small shops the town hall the Lyric Theatre a cinema the Polish community centre and two hotels King Street is supplemented by other shops along Shepherds Bush Road to the north Fulham Palace Road to the south and Hammersmith Road to the east Hammersmith s office activity takes place mainly to the eastern side of its centre along Hammersmith Road and in the Ark an office complex to the south of the flyover which traverses the area citation needed Charing Cross Hospital on Fulham Palace Road is a large multi disciplinary NHS hospital with accident amp emergency and teaching departments run by the Imperial College School of Medicine 16 Architecture Edit The Ark office building designed by British architect Ralph Erskine and completed in 1992 has some resemblance to the hull of a sailing ship 17 Hammersmith Bridge Road Surgery was designed by Guy Greenfield 18 22 St Peter s Square the former Royal Chiswick Laundry and Island Records HQ has been converted to architects studios and offices by Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands It has a Hammersmith Society Conservation award plaque 2009 19 and has been included in tours in Architecture Week 20 Several of Hammersmith s pubs are listed buildings including the Black Lion 21 The Dove 22 The George 23 The Hop Poles 24 the Hope and Anchor 25 the Salutation Inn 26 and The Swan 27 as are Hammersmith s two parish churches St Paul s 28 the town s original church rebuilt in the 1890s and St Peter s built in the 1820s 29 Culture and entertainment Edit The Dove public house Riverside Studios is a cinema performance space bar and cafe Originally film studios Riverside Studios were used by the BBC from 1954 to 1975 for television productions 30 The Lyric Hammersmith Theatre is just off King Street Hammersmith Apollo concert hall and theatre formerly the Carling Hammersmith Apollo the Hammersmith Odeon and before that the Gaumont Cinema is just south of the gyratory The former Hammersmith Palais nightclub has been demolished and the site reused as student accommodation 31 The Polish Social and Cultural Association is on King Street It contains a theatre an art gallery and several restaurants Its library has one of the largest collections of Polish language books outside Poland 32 33 34 35 36 The Dove is a riverside pub with what the Guinness Book of Records listed as the smallest bar room in the world in 2016 surviving as a small space on the right of the bar 37 the pub was frequented by Ernest Hemingway and Graham Greene James Thomson lodged and likely wrote Rule Britannia here 38 The narrow alley in which it stands is the only remnant of the riverside village of Hammersmith the bulk of which was demolished in the 1930s Furnivall Gardens which lies to the east covers the site of Hammersmith Creek and the High Bridge 39 Leisure activity also takes place along Hammersmith s pedestrianised riverside home to the pubs of Lower Mall rowing clubs and the riverside park of Furnival Gardens Hammersmith has a municipal park Ravenscourt Park to the west of the centre Its facilities include tennis courts a basketball court a bowling lawn a paddling pool and playgrounds 40 Lower Mall from the river with Hammersmith Bridge on the right Hammersmith is the historical home of the West London Penguin Swimming and Water Polo Club formerly known as the Hammersmith Penguin Swimming Club 41 Hammersmith Chess Club has been active in the borough since it was formed in 1962 It was initially based in Westcott Lodge later moving to St Paul s Church then to Blythe House and now Lytton Hall near West Kensington tube station 42 Transport EditThe area is on the main A4 trunk road heading west from central London towards the M4 motorway and Heathrow Airport The A4 a busy commuter route passes over the area s main road junction Hammersmith Gyratory System on a long viaduct the Hammersmith Flyover 43 Hammersmith Bridge closed in August 2020 to pedestrians cyclists and road traffic severing the link with Barnes in the southwest Its cast iron pedestals that hold the suspension system in place had become unsafe 44 The centre of Hammersmith is served by two London Underground stations named Hammersmith one is served by the Hammersmith amp City and Circle lines and the other is served by the Piccadilly and District lines The latter station is part of a larger office retail and transport development locally known as The Broadway Centre Hammersmith Broadway stretches from the junction of Queen Caroline Street and King Street in the west to the junction of Hammersmith Road and Butterwick in the east It forms the north side of the gyratory system also known as Hammersmith Roundabout The Broadway Shopping Centre includes a major bus station The length of King Street places the westernmost shops and offices closest to Ravenscourt Park Underground station on the District line one stop west of Hammersmith itself citation needed Hammersmith Bridge EditMain article Hammersmith Bridge Hammersmith Bridge Repair works to the bridge footings showing air conditioning and sensors The first Hammersmith Bridge was designed by William Tierney Clark and opened in 1827 and was the first suspension bridge crossing the River Thames It was redesigned by Joseph Bazalgette and reopened in 1887 8 45 In August 2020 it closed to pedestrians cyclists and road traffic as the cast iron pedestals that hold the suspension system in place became unsafe Work began to improve the structural integrity of the bridge in 2022 44 In literature and music EditHammersmith features in Charles Dickens Great Expectations as the home of the Pocket family Pip resides with the Pockets in their house by the river and goes boating on the river 46 William Morris s utopian novel News from Nowhere 1890 describes a journey up the river from Hammersmith towards Oxford 47 In 1930 Gustav Holst composed Hammersmith a work for military band later rewritten for orchestra reflecting his impressions of the area having lived across the river in Barnes for nearly forty years 48 It begins with a haunting musical depiction of the River Thames flowing underneath Hammersmith Bridge Holst taught music at St Paul s Girls School and composed many of his most famous works there including his The Planets suite A music room in the school is named after him 49 Holst dedicates Hammersmith To the Author of The Water Gypsies 50 Notable people Edit17th century Edit John Milton poet John Milton 1608 1674 poet 51 William Sheridan c 1635 3 October 1711 Bishop of Kilmore and Ardagh 52 18th century Edit William Belsham 1752 1827 political writer and historian 52 Charles Burney 1757 1817 schoolmaster 52 Caroline of Brunswick 1768 1821 princess and Queen Consort of George IV 53 William Crathern born 1793 composer 54 Lewis Kennedy c 1721 1782 nurseryman 55 James Lee 1715 1795 nurseryman 55 19th century Edit Eric Gill typographer Frank Brangwyn artist painter and designer lived at Temple Lodge 56 T J Cobden Sanderson 1840 1922 artist and bookbinder 57 William Tierney Clark 1783 1852 civil engineer designer of first Hammersmith bridge 58 Ellen and William Craft 1826 1891 1824 1900 slave abolitionists 59 Jeanne Deroin 1805 1894 French socialist feminist 60 Eric Gill 1882 1940 typographer and printmaker 61 A P Herbert 1890 1971 humorist 62 Gustav Holst 1874 1934 composer taught music at St Paul s Girls School 49 Leigh Hunt 1784 1859 critic essayist poet and writer 52 Edward Johnston 1872 1944 scholar credited with the revival of calligraphy 63 William Morris 1834 1896 artist writer socialist and activist 64 Ouida Maria Louise Rame 1839 1908 novelist 65 Francis Ronalds 1788 1873 inventor built the first working telegraph at Hammersmith Mall 66 Frederic George Stephens 1827 1907 art critic 67 Emery Walker 1851 1933 engraver and printer 68 Christopher Whall 1849 1924 stained glass artist 69 Evelyn Whitaker 1844 1929 children s writer 70 George Wimpey 1855 1913 stonemason 71 1900 1945 Edit Rosalind Franklin chemist George Devine 1910 1966 director 72 Mary Fedden 1915 2012 artist 73 Rosalind Franklin 1920 1958 X ray crystallographer 74 75 Jocelyn Herbert 1917 2003 stage designer 76 Helen Mirren born 1945 actress 77 Maurice Murphy 1935 2010 trumpet player 78 Eric Newby 1919 2006 travel writer 79 Eric Ravilious 1903 1942 artist 80 81 Tony Richardson 1928 1991 theatre and film director 82 Diana Rigg 1938 2020 actress 83 Vidal Sassoon 1928 2012 hairdresser 84 Labi Siffre born 1945 musician 85 Julian Trevelyan 1910 1988 artist 86 1946 2000 Edit Bill Bailey comedian Joe Calzaghe boxer Alfie Allen born 1986 actor 87 Lily Allen born 1985 pop singer 88 Richard Ayoade born 1977 actor and comedian 89 Bill Bailey born 1964 comedian 90 Sacha Baron Cohen born 1971 comedian and actor 91 Marcus Bent born 1978 footballer 92 Joe Calzaghe born 1972 boxer 93 Parosha Chandran born 1969 human rights barrister 94 Sebastian Coe born 1956 athlete and politician 95 Marie Colvin 1956 2012 journalist 96 Benedict Cumberbatch born 1976 actor 97 James DeGale born 1986 boxer 98 Cara Delevingne born 1992 model and actor 99 Emerald Fennell born 1985 filmmaker 100 Ralph Fiennes born 1962 actor 101 Emilia Fox born 1974 actor 102 Hugh Grant born 1960 actor 103 Michael Gove born 1967 politician 104 George Groves born 1988 boxer 105 Tom Hardy born 1977 actor 106 Miranda Hart born 1972 actor 107 Sophie Hunter born 1978 theatre and opera director 108 James May born 1963 television presenter 109 Barbara Mayo 1946 1970 victim of unsolved murder 110 Douglas Murray born 1979 author journalist 111 Gary Numan born 1958 musician 112 Scott Overall born 1983 marathon runner 113 Stuart Pearce born 1962 footballer 114 Rosamund Pike born 1979 actor 115 Stephen Poliakoff born 1952 playwright 116 Imogen Poots born 1989 actor 117 Jacob Rees Mogg born 1969 politician 118 119 Toby Regbo born 1991 actor 120 Alan Rickman 1946 2016 actor 121 Luke Stoughton born 1977 cricketer 122 Estelle Swaray born 1980 musician 123 Suki Waterhouse born 1992 actress and model 124 Alan Wilder born 1959 rock musician 125 See also Edit London portalList of districts in Hammersmith and FulhamReferences Edit ONS Population figures for all major UK towns and cities https www ons gov uk 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