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Holborn

Holborn (/ˈhbərn/ HOH-bərn or /ˈhɒlbərn/[a]) is a district in central London, which covers the south-eastern part of the London Borough of Camden and a part (St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars) of the Ward of Farringdon Without in the City of London.

Holborn
Holborn
Location within Greater London
Population13,023 (2011 Census. Holborn and Covent Garden Ward)[1]
OS grid referenceTQ310818
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLONDON
Postcode districtWC1, WC2
Postcode districtEC1
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°31′13″N 0°06′49″W / 51.5204°N 0.1136°W / 51.5204; -0.1136

The area has its roots in the ancient parish of Holborn, which lay on the west bank of the now buried River Fleet,[2] taking its name from an alternative name for the river. The area is sometimes described as part of the West End of London[3][4] or of the wider West London area.

The River Fleet also gave its name to the streets Holborn and High Holborn which extend west from the site of the former Newgate in the London Wall, over the Fleet, through Holborn and towards Westminster.

The district benefits from a central location which helps provide a strong mixed economy. The area is particularly noted for its links to the legal profession, the diamond centre at Hatton Garden and Great Ormond Street Hospital.

Origins and administration edit

Holborn emerged from the ancient parish of St Andrew Holborn and its later sub-divisions. The parish church is first mentioned, and described as old, in a charter of 959, but this is before the parish or the landholdings on which it was based took on anything like their settled form.[5]

Toponymy edit

The earliest surviving written record of the area occurs in a charter of AD 959, in which King Edgar the Peaceful granted Westminster Abbey an area of land (much larger than the later parish of Holborn) stretching from the Abbey, on Thorney Island, to the River Fleet. The charter mentions "the old wooden church of St Andrew" (St Andrew, Holborn).[6][7] The name Holborn is used in the charter, but it refers to the River Fleet rather than the district.

The name "Holborn" may derive from the Middle English hol for "hollow", and bourne, a "brook", referring to the River Fleet as it ran through a steep valley (hollow) in places.[6][8]

However, the 16th-century historian John Stow attributes the name to a different watercourse: the Old Bourne ("old brook"), a small stream which he believed ran into the Fleet at Holborn Bridge. This structure was lost when the river was culverted in 1732. The exact course of the stream is uncertain, but according to Stow it started in one of the many small springs near Holborn Bar, the old City toll gate on the summit of Holborn Hill.[8][9] Other historians, however, find the theory implausible, in view of the slope of the land.[10]

Administration: Parish and Ward edit

The Parish of St Andrew, Holborn, was divided by a civil boundary, with part within the Farringdon Without ward of the City of London (later known as St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars) – which includes the parish church and the part within the Ossulstone Hundred of Middlesex (later known as St Andrew Above the Bars). It is not known when the parish of Holborn took on its settled form, but it is likely to have been by the time of the introduction of Canon Law around 1180,[11] with records from the time the hospital of St Giles was established in 1120 indicating that the parish extended further west at that time, presumably to encompass what would become the combined parish of St Giles and Bloomsbury.

A charter of around 1000 shows the boundaries of the city being pushed west to their settled historic extent in around 1000, though this extramural area would have been very sparsely settled. The city’s wards take shape in the 11th century, before the Norman Conquest.[12] The civil division of the parish is very ancient and predates the establishment of the parish in its settled form. In 1394 the Ward of Farringdon was subdivided into Farringdon Within and Farringdon Without, with south-east Holborn part of the latter.

The City Bars mark the boundary of the City of London within Holborn. In 1994 the City boundary shifted slightly to the junction of Chancery Lane and the Bars were moved accordingly.

Many Civil Parishes edit

 
Passage North side of Holborn, 1897 by Philip Norman

It has been described how the two parts of the parish came under separate civil governance (though without any civil governance at parish level) according to whether the part was in the city or outside. From the Tudor period onwards new local government were introduced in England, and parish areas were obliged to take on civil as well as ecclesiastical responsibilities for the first time, this started with relief of the poor.

The two parts became, for civil but not ecclesiastical purposes, two separate parishes known as St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars and St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars, the Bars being the City boundary markers. The area "above Bars" (outside the city's jurisdiction) was organised by the vestry board of the parish of St Andrew.[13]

 
St Andrew Holborn, Below the Bars, in the west of the City of London

As well as Holborn's two main civil parishes, there were a number of extra-parochial areas, parts of the ecclesiastical parish of Holborn but formed their own (usually tiny) civil parish areas:

Response to urbanisation edit

The St George the Martyr Queen Square area became a separate parish, for both civil and ecclesiastical matters, in 1723; but for civil matters was reunited with the part of St Andrew outside the city (Above the Bars) of London in 1767, to form St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars with St George the Martyr.

The Holborn District was created in 1855, consisting of the civil parishes and extra-parochial places of Holborn outside the city; St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars with St George the Martyr, Saffron Hill, Hatton Garden, Ely Rents and Ely Place, as well as two tiny units that were added from the Finsbury Division: Glasshouse Yard and St Sepulchre, Middlesex.

 
The Holborn District (in green, but excluding St Sepulchre Middlesex and Glasshouse Yard which had been attached to it) merged with the combined parishes of St Giles and Bloomsbury (in red), in 1900, to form the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn.
 
The parts of Holborn outside the City formed the eastern part of the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn. The former combined parish of Bloomsbury and St Giles (including most of the Lincoln's Inn Ward).

The Metropolitan Borough of Holborn was created in 1900, consisting of the former area of the Holborn District and the St Giles District, but the small units previously part of the Finsbury Division were instead included in the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury. The Metropolitan Borough of Holborn was abolished in 1965 and its area now forms part of the London Borough of Camden.

Latter history edit

Urban growth edit

The westward growth of London beyond the City Wall, and towards the seat of government in Westminster, took place along the banks of the River Thames and along the roads leading from Ludgate (Fleet Street and The Strand) and Newgate (Holborn and High Holborn). This growth, initially limited to Farringdon Without (which includes a part of Holborn) was well underway in the 12th century, leading to the Ward being retrospectively described as the capital's original West End.[12]

In the 12th century St Andrew's was noted in local title deeds as lying on "Holburnestrate"—Holborn Street,[14] but as the street leads from Roman Newgate, and the church was sited on it by the 10th century, it is probably considerably older. In 1394 the population had grown so large that the Ward of Farringdon had grown too large for effective governance and was formally divided into the separate Wards, (rather than separate named areas within the same Ward) in 1394.

The westward growth towards Westminster accelerated in the Tudor period. The westerly ribbon development through the parish was complete before the Great Fire of 1666, with the displacement of people accelerating the development of the rest of the area. The northern fringe the last area to be developed, with this process finalised in the 18th century.[15][16]

Medieval edit

St Etheldreda's Church, in gated Ely Place, was originally the chapel of the Bishop of Ely's London palace. This ecclesiastical connection allowed the street to remain part of the county of Cambridgeshire until the mid-1930s. This meant that Ye Olde Mitre, a pub located in a court hidden behind the buildings of the Place and the Garden, was licensed by the Cambridgeshire Magistrates.[17][18]

St Etheldreda's is the oldest Roman Catholic church in Britain, and one of two extant buildings in London dating back to the era of Edward I.[19][20][21]

Tudor and Stuart periods edit

Henry VII paid for the road to be paved in 1494 because the thoroughfare "was so deep and miry that many perils and hazards were thereby occasioned, as well to the king's carriages passing that way, as to those of his subjects". Criminals from the Tower and Newgate passed up Holborn on their way to be hanged at Tyburn or St Giles.[22]

Hatton Garden, the centre of the diamond trade, was leased to a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I, Sir Christopher Hatton, at the insistence of the Queen to provide him with an income.

 
The Great Fire died as it reached Holborn's boundary.
 
Rocque map of 1746. Holborn is developed, but the built-up area stopped at the brook which formed the parish boundary with St Pancras (modern King’s Cross) to the north.

The area was not damaged by the Great Fire of London in 1666, though the area of destruction reached its south-eastern boundary.

Legal profession edit

Charles Dickens took up residence in Furnival's Inn (later the site of "Holborn Bars", the former Prudential building designed by Alfred Waterhouse). Dickens put his character "Pip", in Great Expectations, in residence at Barnard's Inn opposite, now occupied by Gresham College.[23] Staple Inn, notable as the promotional image for Old Holborn tobacco,[24] is nearby. The three of these were Inns of Chancery. The most northerly of the Inns of Court, Gray's Inn, is off Holborn, as is Lincoln's Inn: the area has been associated with the legal professions since mediaeval times, and the name of the local militia (now Territorial Army unit, the Inns of Court & City Yeomanry) still reflects that. The unit is nicknamed the Devil's Own, a name given by George III, not due to ferocity in battle, but rather to his dislike of lawyers.[25]

Historic points of interest edit

In the 18th century, Holborn was the location of the infamous Mother Clap's molly house (meeting place for homosexual men). There were 22 inns or taverns recorded in the 1860s. The Holborn Empire, originally Weston's Music Hall, stood between 1857 and 1960, when it was pulled down after structural damage sustained in the Blitz. The theatre premièred one of the first full-length feature films in 1914, The World, the Flesh and the Devil, a 50-minute melodrama filmed in Kinemacolor.[26][27]

Subsequently, the area diversified and become recognisable as the modern street. A plaque stands at number 120 commemorating Thomas Earnshaw's invention of the Marine chronometer, which facilitated long-distance travel. At the corner of Hatton Garden was the old family department store of Gamages. Until 1992, the London Weather Centre was located in the street. The Prudential insurance company relocated in 2002. The Daily Mirror offices used to be directly opposite it, but the site is now occupied by Sainsbury's head office.

 
Peter Pan statue at Great Ormond Street Hospital

Behind the Prudential Building lies the Anglo-Catholic church of St Alban the Martyr.[28] Originally built in 1863 by architect William Butterfield, it was gutted during the Blitz but later reconstructed, retaining Butterfield's west front.

On Holborn Circus lies the Church of St Andrew, an ancient Guild Church that survived the Great Fire of London. However, the parochial authority decided to commission Sir Christopher Wren to rebuild it. Although the nave was destroyed in the Blitz, the reconstruction was faithful to Wren's original. Just to the west of the circus, but originally sited in the middle, is a large equestrian statue of Prince Albert by Charles Bacon, erected in 1874 as the city's official monument to him. It was presented by Charles Oppenheim, of the diamond trading company De Beers, whose headquarters is in nearby Charterhouse Street.

 
Former Pearl Assurance Company building, now the Rosewood London

Geography edit

The district can best be described in reference to the ancient parish and the sub-divisions that succeeded it, however the area is not an administrative unit so contemporary perceptions of its extent can be vague and highly variable. In particular there are overlapping perceptions of the extent of the districts of Holborn, Bloomsbury and St Giles. One of the many factors in this, is a tendency to conflate the Holborn and High Holborn roads with the district.

The now buried River Fleet formed the historic eastern boundary of the ancient parish of Holborn, a course now marked by Farringdon Street, Farringdon Road and other streets.[2] The northern boundary with St Pancras was formed by a tributary of the Fleet later known as Lamb’s Conduit.[29]

The area extends west from Farringdon Street, for three-quarters of a mile, roughly as far as Southampton Row and Holborn tube station. The station was originally named Holborn (Kingsway)[30] as it was on the junction of those two roads. Most of the area lies north of the eponymous road, rather than to the south.

Transport edit

The nearest London Underground stations are Chancery Lane and Holborn. The closest mainline railway station is City Thameslink.

Holborn is served by bus routes 1, 8, 19, 25, 38, 55, 59, 68, 76, 91, 98, 133, 168, 171, 188, 243, 341, X68 and night routes N1, N8, N19, N38, N41, N55, N68 and N171.

Nearby areas edit

Economy edit

In the early 21st century, Holborn has become the site of new offices and hotels. For example, the old neoclassical Pearl Assurance building near the junction with Kingsway was converted into a hotel in 1999.

 
Holborn Bars, built 1879–1901, headquarters of the Prudential Assurance Company, at 138–142 Holborn

There has been attempts by some commercial organisations to rebrand the southern parts of the London Borough of Camden (Holborn, Bloomsbury and St Giles) as "Midtown".[31] This area, is notionally in the very middle of London, being situated between the Westminster and the City,[32] but this Americanisation has been widely criticised[by whom?] and not accepted or used by Londoners.[citation needed]

Representation edit

 
The former Holborn Town Hall, completed 1894

The MPs for the area are:

The three ward councillors for Holborn and Covent Garden, representing the London Borough of Camden part of the district are:

  • Cllr Julian Fulbrook, Cllr Sue Vincent and Cllr Awale Olad of the Labour Party.

Holborn is represented in the London Assembly as part of Barnet and Camden by:

Notable people edit

The following is a list of notable people who were born in or are significantly connected with Holborn.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  • a. ^ Pronunciation: The authoritative BBC pronunciation unit recommends "ˈhəʊbə(r)n" but allows "sometimes also hohl-buhrn". The organisation's less formal Pronouncing British Placenames notes, "You'll occasionally find towns where nobody can agree.... Holborn in central London has for many years been pronounced 'hoe-bun', but having so few local residents to preserve this, it's rapidly changing to a more natural 'hol-burn'".[33][34] However, Modern British and American English pronunciation (2008) cites "Holborn" as one of its examples of a common word where the "l" is silent.[35] The popular tourist guide The Rough Guide to Britain sticks to the traditional form, with neither "l" nor "r": /ˈhbən/ HOH-bən.[36]

References edit

  1. ^ "Camden Ward population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
  2. ^ a b Temple, Philip (2008). "'West of Farringdon Road', in Survey of London: Volume 47, Northern Clerkenwell and Pentonville". London: British History Online. pp. 22–51. Retrieved 31 July 2020.
  3. ^ "West End Project Overview" (PDF). London Borough of Camden. (PDF) from the original on 2 September 2018.
  4. ^ "Case Study" (PDF). London Borough of Camden. (PDF) from the original on 18 June 2021.
  5. ^ detail of the perambulation of the landholding described in 'Citadel of the Saxons' by Rory Naismith, p130
  6. ^ a b Lethaby, William (1902). London before the conquest. London: Macmillan. p. 60.
  7. ^ Citadel of the Saxons, Rory Naismith, p130
  8. ^ a b Besant, Walter; Mitton, Geraldine (1903). Holborn and Bloomsbury. The Fascination of London (Project Gutenberg, 2007 ed.). London: Adam and Charles Black. Retrieved 13 August 2008.
  9. ^ Strype, John (1720). "Rivers and other Waters serving this City". Survey of London. The Stuart London Project. Online edition: University of Sheffield 2007.
  10. ^ Lethaby (1902:48)
  11. ^ History of the Countryside by Oliver Rackham, 1986 p19 After the development of Canon Law, changes after this time became legally onerous and rare
  12. ^ a b Process, terms and sources described in detail in "London, 800-1216". Brooke and Keir, Chapter 7
  13. ^ The Parish of St Andrew Holborn pp. 11–12 Caroline Barron London 1979
  14. ^ Harben, Henry (1918). A Dictionary of London. London: Herbert Jenkins.
  15. ^ "Strype map of 1720".
  16. ^ "Horwood map of 1799".
  17. ^ Vitaliev, Vitali (3 January 2003). "Things that go bump on the map". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 12 August 2008.
  18. ^ Hammond, Derek (28 June 2006). . Time Out. Archived from the original on 26 July 2008. Retrieved 12 August 2008.
  19. ^ "History of the Church". stetheldreda.com. It is the oldest Catholic church in England and one of only two remaining buildings in London from the reign of Edward I.
  20. ^ Sarah Kettler; Carole Trimble (2001). The Amateur Historian's Guide to Medieval and Tudor London, 1066–1600. Capital Books. p. 103. ISBN 978-1-892123-32-9. This is Britain's oldest Roman Catholic church, dating from the 13th century.
  21. ^ Andrew Davies (1988). Literary London. Pan Macmillan. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-333-45708-5. In 1874 when the church was bought back by the Roman Catholics it was found to be full of 'inconceivable filth, living and dead'. St Etheldreda's is the oldest Catholic church building in Britain.
  22. ^ Timbs, John (1855). Curiosities of London: Exhibiting the Most Rare and Remarkable Objects of Interest in the Metropolis. D. Bogue. p. 428.
  23. ^ Chap. 20
  24. ^ Hibbert, Christopher; et al. (1983). The London Encyclopedia (2010 ed.). London: MacMillan. p. 397. ISBN 1-4050-4925-1.
  25. ^ "The Inns of Court and City Yeomanry".
  26. ^ The World, the Flesh and the Devil at IMDb  
  27. ^ The full-length documentary With Our King and Queen Through India, also in Kinemacolor, premièred in February 1912, and the stencil-coloured The Miracle opened at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in December 1912.
  28. ^ St Alban the Martyr accessed 14 December 2013
  29. ^ The History of the River Fleet, UCL Fleet Restoration Team, 2009
  30. ^ "Article on the history and future of Holborn tube station".
  31. ^ Barrett, Helen (22 April 2023). "The London districts nobody knows: where are NoHo, Midtown and Brain Yard?". www.ft.com. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023.
  32. ^ Colvile, Robert (27 June 2012). . The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 28 June 2012.
  33. ^ Olausson, Lena (2006). "Holborn". Oxford BBC Guide to Pronunciation, The Essential Handbook of the Spoken Word (3rd ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 173. ISBN 0-19-280710-2.
  34. ^ "Pronouncing British Placenames". BBC. 7 March 2007. Retrieved 21 November 2009.
  35. ^ Dretzke, Burkhard (2008). Modern British and American English pronunciation. Paderborn, Germany: Ferdinand Schöningh. p. 63. ISBN 978-3-8252-2053-2.
  36. ^ Roberts, Andrew; Matthew Teller (2004). The Rough Guide to Britain. London: Rough Guides Ltd. p. 109. ISBN 1-84353-301-4.

External links edit

holborn, other, uses, disambiguation, bərn, district, central, london, which, covers, south, eastern, part, london, borough, camden, part, andrew, below, bars, ward, farringdon, without, city, london, staple, near, chancery, lane, tube, station, last, inns, ch. For other uses see Holborn disambiguation Holborn ˈ h oʊ b er n HOH bern or ˈ h ɒ l b er n a is a district in central London which covers the south eastern part of the London Borough of Camden and a part St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars of the Ward of Farringdon Without in the City of London HolbornStaple Inn near Chancery Lane tube station the last of the Inns of ChanceryHolbornLocation within Greater LondonPopulation13 023 2011 Census Holborn and Covent Garden Ward 1 OS grid referenceTQ310818London boroughCamdenCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townLONDONPostcode districtWC1 WC2Postcode districtEC1Dialling code020PoliceMetropolitanFireLondonAmbulanceLondonUK ParliamentHolborn and St PancrasCities of London and WestminsterLondon AssemblyBarnet and CamdenCity and EastList of places UK England London 51 31 13 N 0 06 49 W 51 5204 N 0 1136 W 51 5204 0 1136The area has its roots in the ancient parish of Holborn which lay on the west bank of the now buried River Fleet 2 taking its name from an alternative name for the river The area is sometimes described as part of the West End of London 3 4 or of the wider West London area The River Fleet also gave its name to the streets Holborn and High Holborn which extend west from the site of the former Newgate in the London Wall over the Fleet through Holborn and towards Westminster The district benefits from a central location which helps provide a strong mixed economy The area is particularly noted for its links to the legal profession the diamond centre at Hatton Garden and Great Ormond Street Hospital Contents 1 Origins and administration 1 1 Toponymy 1 2 Administration Parish and Ward 1 3 Many Civil Parishes 1 4 Response to urbanisation 2 Latter history 2 1 Urban growth 2 2 Medieval 2 3 Tudor and Stuart periods 2 4 Legal profession 2 5 Historic points of interest 3 Geography 3 1 Transport 3 2 Nearby areas 4 Economy 5 Representation 6 Notable people 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksOrigins and administration editHolborn emerged from the ancient parish of St Andrew Holborn and its later sub divisions The parish church is first mentioned and described as old in a charter of 959 but this is before the parish or the landholdings on which it was based took on anything like their settled form 5 Toponymy edit See also Street names of Holborn The earliest surviving written record of the area occurs in a charter of AD 959 in which King Edgar the Peaceful granted Westminster Abbey an area of land much larger than the later parish of Holborn stretching from the Abbey on Thorney Island to the River Fleet The charter mentions the old wooden church of St Andrew St Andrew Holborn 6 7 The name Holborn is used in the charter but it refers to the River Fleet rather than the district The name Holborn may derive from the Middle English hol for hollow and bourne a brook referring to the River Fleet as it ran through a steep valley hollow in places 6 8 However the 16th century historian John Stow attributes the name to a different watercourse the Old Bourne old brook a small stream which he believed ran into the Fleet at Holborn Bridge This structure was lost when the river was culverted in 1732 The exact course of the stream is uncertain but according to Stow it started in one of the many small springs near Holborn Bar the old City toll gate on the summit of Holborn Hill 8 9 Other historians however find the theory implausible in view of the slope of the land 10 Administration Parish and Ward edit The Parish of St Andrew Holborn was divided by a civil boundary with part within the Farringdon Without ward of the City of London later known as St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars which includes the parish church and the part within the Ossulstone Hundred of Middlesex later known as St Andrew Above the Bars It is not known when the parish of Holborn took on its settled form but it is likely to have been by the time of the introduction of Canon Law around 1180 11 with records from the time the hospital of St Giles was established in 1120 indicating that the parish extended further west at that time presumably to encompass what would become the combined parish of St Giles and Bloomsbury A charter of around 1000 shows the boundaries of the city being pushed west to their settled historic extent in around 1000 though this extramural area would have been very sparsely settled The city s wards take shape in the 11th century before the Norman Conquest 12 The civil division of the parish is very ancient and predates the establishment of the parish in its settled form In 1394 the Ward of Farringdon was subdivided into Farringdon Within and Farringdon Without with south east Holborn part of the latter The City Bars mark the boundary of the City of London within Holborn In 1994 the City boundary shifted slightly to the junction of Chancery Lane and the Bars were moved accordingly Many Civil Parishes edit nbsp Passage North side of Holborn 1897 by Philip NormanIt has been described how the two parts of the parish came under separate civil governance though without any civil governance at parish level according to whether the part was in the city or outside From the Tudor period onwards new local government were introduced in England and parish areas were obliged to take on civil as well as ecclesiastical responsibilities for the first time this started with relief of the poor The two parts became for civil but not ecclesiastical purposes two separate parishes known as St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars and St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars the Bars being the City boundary markers The area above Bars outside the city s jurisdiction was organised by the vestry board of the parish of St Andrew 13 nbsp St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars in the west of the City of LondonAs well as Holborn s two main civil parishes there were a number of extra parochial areas parts of the ecclesiastical parish of Holborn but formed their own usually tiny civil parish areas Liberty of Saffron Hill Hatton Garden Ely Rents and Ely Place Lincoln s Inn excluding Lincoln s Inn Fields in the combined parish of St Giles and Bloomsbury Thavie s Inn Barnard s Inn Furnival s Inn Gray s Inn Staple InnResponse to urbanisation edit The St George the Martyr Queen Square area became a separate parish for both civil and ecclesiastical matters in 1723 but for civil matters was reunited with the part of St Andrew outside the city Above the Bars of London in 1767 to form St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars with St George the Martyr The Holborn District was created in 1855 consisting of the civil parishes and extra parochial places of Holborn outside the city St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars with St George the Martyr Saffron Hill Hatton Garden Ely Rents and Ely Place as well as two tiny units that were added from the Finsbury Division Glasshouse Yard and St Sepulchre Middlesex nbsp The Holborn District in green but excluding St Sepulchre Middlesex and Glasshouse Yard which had been attached to it merged with the combined parishes of St Giles and Bloomsbury in red in 1900 to form the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn nbsp The parts of Holborn outside the City formed the eastern part of the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn The former combined parish of Bloomsbury and St Giles including most of the Lincoln s Inn Ward The Metropolitan Borough of Holborn was created in 1900 consisting of the former area of the Holborn District and the St Giles District but the small units previously part of the Finsbury Division were instead included in the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury The Metropolitan Borough of Holborn was abolished in 1965 and its area now forms part of the London Borough of Camden Latter history editUrban growth edit The westward growth of London beyond the City Wall and towards the seat of government in Westminster took place along the banks of the River Thames and along the roads leading from Ludgate Fleet Street and The Strand and Newgate Holborn and High Holborn This growth initially limited to Farringdon Without which includes a part of Holborn was well underway in the 12th century leading to the Ward being retrospectively described as the capital s original West End 12 In the 12th century St Andrew s was noted in local title deeds as lying on Holburnestrate Holborn Street 14 but as the street leads from Roman Newgate and the church was sited on it by the 10th century it is probably considerably older In 1394 the population had grown so large that the Ward of Farringdon had grown too large for effective governance and was formally divided into the separate Wards rather than separate named areas within the same Ward in 1394 The westward growth towards Westminster accelerated in the Tudor period The westerly ribbon development through the parish was complete before the Great Fire of 1666 with the displacement of people accelerating the development of the rest of the area The northern fringe the last area to be developed with this process finalised in the 18th century 15 16 Medieval edit St Etheldreda s Church in gated Ely Place was originally the chapel of the Bishop of Ely s London palace This ecclesiastical connection allowed the street to remain part of the county of Cambridgeshire until the mid 1930s This meant that Ye Olde Mitre a pub located in a court hidden behind the buildings of the Place and the Garden was licensed by the Cambridgeshire Magistrates 17 18 St Etheldreda s is the oldest Roman Catholic church in Britain and one of two extant buildings in London dating back to the era of Edward I 19 20 21 Tudor and Stuart periods edit Henry VII paid for the road to be paved in 1494 because the thoroughfare was so deep and miry that many perils and hazards were thereby occasioned as well to the king s carriages passing that way as to those of his subjects Criminals from the Tower and Newgate passed up Holborn on their way to be hanged at Tyburn or St Giles 22 Hatton Garden the centre of the diamond trade was leased to a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I Sir Christopher Hatton at the insistence of the Queen to provide him with an income nbsp The Great Fire died as it reached Holborn s boundary nbsp Rocque map of 1746 Holborn is developed but the built up area stopped at the brook which formed the parish boundary with St Pancras modern King s Cross to the north The area was not damaged by the Great Fire of London in 1666 though the area of destruction reached its south eastern boundary Legal profession edit Charles Dickens took up residence in Furnival s Inn later the site of Holborn Bars the former Prudential building designed by Alfred Waterhouse Dickens put his character Pip in Great Expectations in residence at Barnard s Inn opposite now occupied by Gresham College 23 Staple Inn notable as the promotional image for Old Holborn tobacco 24 is nearby The three of these were Inns of Chancery The most northerly of the Inns of Court Gray s Inn is off Holborn as is Lincoln s Inn the area has been associated with the legal professions since mediaeval times and the name of the local militia now Territorial Army unit the Inns of Court amp City Yeomanry still reflects that The unit is nicknamed the Devil s Own a name given by George III not due to ferocity in battle but rather to his dislike of lawyers 25 Historic points of interest edit In the 18th century Holborn was the location of the infamous Mother Clap s molly house meeting place for homosexual men There were 22 inns or taverns recorded in the 1860s The Holborn Empire originally Weston s Music Hall stood between 1857 and 1960 when it was pulled down after structural damage sustained in the Blitz The theatre premiered one of the first full length feature films in 1914 The World the Flesh and the Devil a 50 minute melodrama filmed in Kinemacolor 26 27 Subsequently the area diversified and become recognisable as the modern street A plaque stands at number 120 commemorating Thomas Earnshaw s invention of the Marine chronometer which facilitated long distance travel At the corner of Hatton Garden was the old family department store of Gamages Until 1992 the London Weather Centre was located in the street The Prudential insurance company relocated in 2002 The Daily Mirror offices used to be directly opposite it but the site is now occupied by Sainsbury s head office nbsp Peter Pan statue at Great Ormond Street HospitalBehind the Prudential Building lies the Anglo Catholic church of St Alban the Martyr 28 Originally built in 1863 by architect William Butterfield it was gutted during the Blitz but later reconstructed retaining Butterfield s west front On Holborn Circus lies the Church of St Andrew an ancient Guild Church that survived the Great Fire of London However the parochial authority decided to commission Sir Christopher Wren to rebuild it Although the nave was destroyed in the Blitz the reconstruction was faithful to Wren s original Just to the west of the circus but originally sited in the middle is a large equestrian statue of Prince Albert by Charles Bacon erected in 1874 as the city s official monument to him It was presented by Charles Oppenheim of the diamond trading company De Beers whose headquarters is in nearby Charterhouse Street nbsp Former Pearl Assurance Company building now the Rosewood LondonGeography editThe district can best be described in reference to the ancient parish and the sub divisions that succeeded it however the area is not an administrative unit so contemporary perceptions of its extent can be vague and highly variable In particular there are overlapping perceptions of the extent of the districts of Holborn Bloomsbury and St Giles One of the many factors in this is a tendency to conflate the Holborn and High Holborn roads with the district The now buried River Fleet formed the historic eastern boundary of the ancient parish of Holborn a course now marked by Farringdon Street Farringdon Road and other streets 2 The northern boundary with St Pancras was formed by a tributary of the Fleet later known as Lamb s Conduit 29 The area extends west from Farringdon Street for three quarters of a mile roughly as far as Southampton Row and Holborn tube station The station was originally named Holborn Kingsway 30 as it was on the junction of those two roads Most of the area lies north of the eponymous road rather than to the south Transport edit The nearest London Underground stations are Chancery Lane and Holborn The closest mainline railway station is City Thameslink Holborn is served by bus routes 1 8 19 25 38 55 59 68 76 91 98 133 168 171 188 243 341 X68 and night routes N1 N8 N19 N38 N41 N55 N68 and N171 Nearby areas edit Bloomsbury Clerkenwell Smithfield Charing Cross Soho Covent Garden St Giles PiccadillyEconomy editIn the early 21st century Holborn has become the site of new offices and hotels For example the old neoclassical Pearl Assurance building near the junction with Kingsway was converted into a hotel in 1999 nbsp Holborn Bars built 1879 1901 headquarters of the Prudential Assurance Company at 138 142 HolbornThere has been attempts by some commercial organisations to rebrand the southern parts of the London Borough of Camden Holborn Bloomsbury and St Giles as Midtown 31 This area is notionally in the very middle of London being situated between the Westminster and the City 32 but this Americanisation has been widely criticised by whom and not accepted or used by Londoners citation needed Representation edit nbsp The former Holborn Town Hall completed 1894The MPs for the area are Keir Starmer MP the Labour Party Member of Parliament for Holborn and St Pancras Nickie Aiken the Conservative MP for the Cities of London and Westminster which includes the City of London portion of Holborn The three ward councillors for Holborn and Covent Garden representing the London Borough of Camden part of the district are Cllr Julian Fulbrook Cllr Sue Vincent and Cllr Awale Olad of the Labour Party Holborn is represented in the London Assembly as part of Barnet and Camden by Andrew Dismore of the Labour Party Notable people editThe following is a list of notable people who were born in or are significantly connected with Holborn John Barbirolli 1899 1970 conductor born in Southampton Row blue plaque on hotel his father managed John William Bean 1824 1882 criminal born in Holborn He attempted to assassinate Queen Victoria Thomas Chatterton 1752 1770 poet born in Bristol and died in a garret in Holborn at the age of 17 Sir John Elley 1764 1839 a hero of the Napoleonic Wars born to the owner of an eating house in Furnival s Inn Samuel Coleridge Taylor 1875 1912 composer born at 15 Theobalds Road acclaimed especially for The Song of Hiawatha trilogy James Day 1850 1895 cricketer born in Holborn Charles Dickens 1812 1870 He lived in Doughty Street where his house is now a museum Rupert Farley actor and voice actor born in Holborn Naomi Lewis 1911 2009 advocate of animal rights poet children s author and teacher She lived in Red Lion Square from 1935 to 2009 Eric Morley 1918 2000 founder of the Miss World pageant born in Holborn Pedro Perera 1832 1915 first class cricketer Frederico Perera 1836 1909 first class cricketer Ann Radcliffe 1764 1823 novelist and pioneer of the Gothic novel born in Holborn John Shaw Jr 1803 1870 architect born in Holborn praised as a designer in the Manner of Wren Barry Sheene 1950 2003 World Champion motorcycle racer He spent his early years in Holborn William Morris 1845 1896 artist and socialist He lived at 8 Red Lion Square Matthew Ball principal dancer of the Royal Ballet lives there Gallery edit nbsp The headquarters of Sainsbury s at Holborn Circus nbsp Grange Holborn Hotel nbsp High Holborn nbsp Entrance to Gray s Inn nbsp Royal London Fusiliers Monument on Holborn dedicated to those who died in World War ISee also editHolborn Circus nbsp London portalNotes edita Pronunciation The authoritative BBC pronunciation unit recommends ˈheʊbe r n but allows sometimes also hohl buhrn The organisation s less formal Pronouncing British Placenames notes You ll occasionally find towns where nobody can agree Holborn in central London has for many years been pronounced hoe bun but having so few local residents to preserve this it s rapidly changing to a more natural hol burn 33 34 However Modern British and American English pronunciation 2008 cites Holborn as one of its examples of a common word where the l is silent 35 The popular tourist guide The Rough Guide to Britain sticks to the traditional form with neither l nor r ˈ h oʊ b en HOH ben 36 References edit Camden Ward population 2011 Neighbourhood Statistics Office for National Statistics Retrieved 20 October 2016 a b Temple Philip 2008 West of Farringdon Road in Survey of London Volume 47 Northern Clerkenwell and Pentonville London British History Online pp 22 51 Retrieved 31 July 2020 West End Project Overview PDF London Borough of Camden Archived PDF from the original on 2 September 2018 Case Study PDF London Borough of Camden Archived PDF from the original on 18 June 2021 detail of the perambulation of the landholding described in Citadel of the Saxons by Rory Naismith p130 a b Lethaby William 1902 London before the conquest London Macmillan p 60 Citadel of the Saxons Rory Naismith p130 a b Besant Walter Mitton Geraldine 1903 Holborn and Bloomsbury The Fascination of London Project Gutenberg 2007 ed London Adam and Charles Black Retrieved 13 August 2008 Strype John 1720 Rivers and other Waters serving this City Survey of London The Stuart London Project Online edition University of Sheffield 2007 Lethaby 1902 48 History of the Countryside by Oliver Rackham 1986 p19 After the development of Canon Law changes after this time became legally onerous and rare a b Process terms and sources described in detail in London 800 1216 Brooke and Keir Chapter 7 The Parish of St Andrew Holborn pp 11 12 Caroline Barron London 1979 Harben Henry 1918 A Dictionary of London London Herbert Jenkins Strype map of 1720 Horwood map of 1799 Vitaliev Vitali 3 January 2003 Things that go bump on the map The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 12 August 2008 Hammond Derek 28 June 2006 Secret London Ye Olde Mitre Tavern Time Out Archived from the original on 26 July 2008 Retrieved 12 August 2008 History of the Church stetheldreda com It is the oldest Catholic church in England and one of only two remaining buildings in London from the reign of Edward I Sarah Kettler Carole Trimble 2001 The Amateur Historian s Guide to Medieval and Tudor London 1066 1600 Capital Books p 103 ISBN 978 1 892123 32 9 This is Britain s oldest Roman Catholic church dating from the 13th century Andrew Davies 1988 Literary London Pan Macmillan p 112 ISBN 978 0 333 45708 5 In 1874 when the church was bought back by the Roman Catholics it was found to be full of inconceivable filth living and dead St Etheldreda s is the oldest Catholic church building in Britain Timbs John 1855 Curiosities of London Exhibiting the Most Rare and Remarkable Objects of Interest in the Metropolis D Bogue p 428 Chap 20 Hibbert Christopher et al 1983 The London Encyclopedia 2010 ed London MacMillan p 397 ISBN 1 4050 4925 1 The Inns of Court and City Yeomanry The World the Flesh and the Devil at IMDb nbsp The full length documentary With Our King and Queen Through India also in Kinemacolor premiered in February 1912 and the stencil coloured The Miracle opened at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden in December 1912 St Alban the Martyr accessed 14 December 2013 The History of the River Fleet UCL Fleet Restoration Team 2009 Article on the history and future of Holborn tube station Barrett Helen 22 April 2023 The London districts nobody knows where are NoHo Midtown and Brain Yard www ft com Archived from the original on 24 April 2023 Colvile Robert 27 June 2012 A Midtown in London There s NoHo chance The Telegraph Archived from the original on 28 June 2012 Olausson Lena 2006 Holborn Oxford BBC Guide to Pronunciation The Essential Handbook of the Spoken Word 3rd ed Oxford England Oxford University Press p 173 ISBN 0 19 280710 2 Pronouncing British Placenames BBC 7 March 2007 Retrieved 21 November 2009 Dretzke Burkhard 2008 Modern British and American English pronunciation Paderborn Germany Ferdinand Schoningh p 63 ISBN 978 3 8252 2053 2 Roberts Andrew Matthew Teller 2004 The Rough Guide to Britain London Rough Guides Ltd p 109 ISBN 1 84353 301 4 External links editHolborn at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage Holborn and Bloomsbury by Sir Walter Besant and Geraldine Edith Mitton 1903 from Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Holborn amp oldid 1195879156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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