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Wine Street, Bristol

Wine Street, together with High Street, Broad Street and Corn Street, is one of the four cross streets which met at the Bristol High Cross, the heart of Bristol, England when it was a walled mediaeval town. From this crossroads Wine Street runs along a level ridge approximately 175m north-eastwards to the top of Union Street.[1]

Wine Street, Bristol
Wine Street, Bristol, looking towards High Street
Location within Central Bristol
Maintained byBristol City Council
LocationBristol, England
Postal codeBS1
Coordinates51°27′19″N 2°35′30″W / 51.4554°N 2.5917°W / 51.4554; -2.5917
NorthUnion Street
EastNewgate
SouthHigh Street
WestCorn Street

Wine Street was for centuries an important shopping street but, following wartime destruction and the decision to move Bristol's main shopping area to Broadmead, it now contains little notable architecture and acts as barrier between the Old City and Castle Park. Bristol City Council are now seeking to repair this by redeveloping the area.[2]

History

 
Robert Ricart's map of Bristol in 1479. Wine Street is shown running north-east from the High Cross (Alta Crux)

Wine Street, together with High Street, Corn Street and Broad Street, formed the earliest nucleus of Bristol.[1] Ricart's Plan of 1479, one of the first English town plans, shows Wine Street with the High Cross at one end and Newgate at the other; the other three cross streets are also shown, each ending at their own gate in the city wall.[3] The name Wine Street is thought to be a corruption of Winch Street, after a winch-operated pillory which stood at the eastern end of the street.[4]

It was a commercial street from its earliest days: in 1286, Thomas de Westone and his wife Roysia took out a lease on two shops there for thirty years 'at a poetical rent of a rose at the feast of St John the Baptist yearly'.[5] By the 14th century, the four cross streets and Bristol Bridge were a clearly defined shopping centre: Bristol Bridge, the prime site, was the location of jewellers and mercers; High Street was home to wool drapers; and linen drapers were to be found on Wine Street.[6] Samuel Pepys, his wife and servants came to the Horse Shoe Inn on Wine Street for a day in 1668, and described Bristol as 'in every way another London', though he noted that there were 'no carts, it generally stands on vaults, only dog-carts'.[5]

In the early 17th century an open-sided corn market was built in the middle of Wine Street.[7] Shown on Millerd's Map of 1671,[8] this was 18 feet (5.5 m) wide by 80 feet (24 m) long. It left only a narrow passageway on either side for those who wished to go along the street, and was demolished in 1727. Eventually a Cheese Market was erected between its former location and Mary le Port Street.[9]

Thomas Cadell, who went on to make a fortune in bookselling and publishing, was born on Wine Street in 1742; his father, also Thomas Cadell, was a bookseller.[10] Robert Southey, Poet Laureate from 1813 to 1843, was born on Wine Street in 1774; his father, also named Robert Southey, was a linen draper.[11] Southey is commemorated by post-war Southey House, though Southey's birthplace was actually at the other end of the street.[12]

By the 1820s, it seems the drapers of Wine Street were becoming complacent: William Ablett came from London to manage a shop here and wrote that 'trade was conducted in a droning sort of way', and shocked the local traders by his new-fangled ideas about window-dressing several times a week with lavish displays of shawls and bolts of fabric. Thomas Jones, whose department store started in Wine Street in 1843, was considered outrageous for selling not just drapery, but anything that would make a profit. His business grew into High Street and Mary le Port Street,[13] and incorporated the Guard House,[14] where soldiers had once been billeted during the Civil War.[15]

At the turn of the 20th century, Wine Street still formed part of Bristol's chief shopping centre and contained many of Bristol's most exclusive shops and department stores. In 1915 the globes and lanterns of its street lamps were painted blue to dim their light as an air raid precaution; in the event Bristol suffered no aerial attacks during the First World War.[16] Things were very different 25 years later, however: almost all buildings on Wine Street were destroyed or damaged beyond repair by aerial bombing on 24 November 1940, including the landmark Dutch House which stood on the corner of Wine Street and High Street.[17] An eyewitness described the scene:

...looking up Clare Street, I was appalled at the view of Wine Street. I could see All Saints Church intact, but beyond the site of the old High Cross all detail was lost in one vast sheet of orange flame.[18]

Wine Street had for many centuries been an important shopping area, and a key part of Bristol's pre-war shopping axis which ran from Queens Road and Park Street, through St Nicholas Market, Wine Street and Castle Street and onwards to Old Market Street and Stapleton Road; nonetheless post-war planners decided to move Bristol's main shopping area to Broadmead, where the larger sites required by the bigger retailers could be accommodated.[19] Wine Street was widened in 1956, and new buildings were erected on the north side of the street.[20] Plans for the area to the south of Wine Street to become a new Civic Centre, including a city museum and art gallery, were eroded by the leasing of the Bank of England and the Norwich Union sites and then dropped on the grounds of cost. Finally, it was decided to create a 'really splendid' park. Hugh Casson, Neville Conder and Partners produced a plan for this, but in the end the Parks Department laid out their own 'emasculated' version of the park.[21]

Wine Street today

The north side of Wine Street now has just three buildings: The Prudential Building, now let out as office suites;[22] across The Pithay, the Vintry Building which also offers rental office suites;[23] and Southey House, now a block of 38 flats.[24]

Andrew Foyle, in his Pevsner Architectural Guide to Bristol, describes Wine Street as 'perhaps the saddest post-Blitz transformation'. He is dismissive of the buildings on the north side, berating the Prudential Building's 'dull stripped classicism' and describing the Vintry Building and Southey House as 'singularly unimaginative'. He is scornful of the Bank of England building on the south side, 'merely occupying the land, with bleak fenestration and a puny entrance', its 'weak' extension 'weakly set back over a parking access ramp'.[25]

Bristol City Council is seeking redevelopment of the area south of Wine Street and around Mary le Port Street, to help connect the markets area with the shopping quarter at Broadmead. This would include reducing the width of Wine Street to more closely resemble its historic proportions.[26] The redevelopment of this area 'offer[s] perhaps the greatest potential of any site in the city to demonstrate the ambition of Bristol and to realise a connected and coherent historic core'.[2]

Wine Street is within the Old City and Queen Square Conservation Area.[27]

Listed buildings

There are no listed buildings on Wine Street. There is, however, one unlisted building of merit:

Number Grade Year listed Description
Unlisted building of merit n/a Prudential Buildings[27]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b Watts, Lorna; Rahtz, Philip (1985). Mary-le-Port Bristol Excavations 1962/3. City of Bristol Museums and Art Gallery. pp. 16–17. ISBN 0-900199-26-1.
  2. ^ a b "The City Centre Framework - Old City - character statement and place plan" (PDF). Bristol City Council City Design Group. 2018. pp. 4–6. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
  3. ^ "Plan of Bristol, from Ricart's calendar". Bristol Archives. Bristol City Council. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
  4. ^ Smith, Veronica (2001). The Street Names of Bristol. Broadcast Books. p. 319. ISBN 1 874092-90-7.
  5. ^ a b Wells, Charles (1969). Bristol's History. Reece Winstone. pp. 53–54. ISBN 0-900814-29-2.
  6. ^ Reid, Helen (1987). Bristol & Co. Redcliffe Press. p. 7. ISBN 0-948265-61-2.
  7. ^ Wells, Charles (1969). Bristol's History. Reece Winstone. p. 39. ISBN 0-900814-29-2.
  8. ^ "Millerd's 'The Citty of Bristoll'". Bristol Museums Galleries Archives. Retrieved 29 April 2018.
  9. ^ Wells, Charles (1969). Bristol's History. Reece Winstone. p. 58. ISBN 0-900814-29-2.
  10. ^ Groom, Nick (2016). Thomas Chatterton and Romantic Culture. Springer. p. 108. ISBN 9780230390225.
  11. ^ Carnall, Geoffrey (2004). "Southey, Robert (1774–1843), poet and reviewer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 26 August 2012. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  12. ^ Winstone, Reece (1979). "Plate 43". Bristol as it Was 1928-1933. ISBN 0-900814-57-8.
  13. ^ Reid, Helen (1987). Bristol & Co. Redcliffe Press. p. 37. ISBN 0-948265-61-2.
  14. ^ Winstone, Reece (1984). "Plate 18". Bristol as it Was 1879-1874. ISBN 0-900814-64-0.
  15. ^ Wells, Charles (1969). Bristol's History. Reece Winstone. p. 56. ISBN 0-900814-29-2.
  16. ^ David J. Eveleigh (1999). A Century of Bristol. Sutton. p. 34. ISBN 0-7509-2426-8.
  17. ^ Besley, James; Reid, Helen (1990). West at War. Redcliffe Press Limited. p. 49. ISBN 0-948-265-64-7.
  18. ^ Winstone, Reece (1980). Bristol in the 1940s. Reece Winstone. p. 22. ISBN 0-900814-61-6.
  19. ^ Hasegawa, Junichi (1992). Replanning the blitzed city centre. Open University Press. pp. 90–95. ISBN 0-335-15633-9.
  20. ^ Winstone, Reece (1980). "plate 60". Bristol as it was 1950-1953. Reece Winstone. ISBN 9780900814358.
  21. ^ Priest, Gordon; Cobb, Pamela (1980). The Fight for Bristol. Bristol Civic Society and The Redcliffe Press. p. 82.
  22. ^ "Newly Refurbished Office Suites in Bristol City Centre To Let - Prudential Building Wine Street, Bristol Avon, BS1 2PH". GVA. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
  23. ^ "Vintry Building". Ashville Group. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
  24. ^ "Bristol Residential Development Survey Report 2017 Schedules". Bristol City Council. 2017. p. 26. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
  25. ^ Foyle, Andrew (2004). Pevsner Architectural Guides: Bristol. Yale University Press. p. 152. ISBN 0-300-10442-1.
  26. ^ "Bristol Central Area Plan" (PDF). Bristol City Council. 2015. pp. 60–61. Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  27. ^ a b "Conservation Area No.4 - City and Queen Square - Character Appraisal" (PDF). Bristol City Council. Retrieved 3 May 2018.

wine, street, bristol, wine, street, together, with, high, street, broad, street, corn, street, four, cross, streets, which, bristol, high, cross, heart, bristol, england, when, walled, mediaeval, town, from, this, crossroads, wine, street, runs, along, level,. Wine Street together with High Street Broad Street and Corn Street is one of the four cross streets which met at the Bristol High Cross the heart of Bristol England when it was a walled mediaeval town From this crossroads Wine Street runs along a level ridge approximately 175m north eastwards to the top of Union Street 1 Wine Street BristolWine Street Bristol looking towards High StreetLocation within Central BristolMaintained byBristol City CouncilLocationBristol EnglandPostal codeBS1Coordinates51 27 19 N 2 35 30 W 51 4554 N 2 5917 W 51 4554 2 5917NorthUnion StreetEastNewgateSouthHigh StreetWestCorn StreetWine Street was for centuries an important shopping street but following wartime destruction and the decision to move Bristol s main shopping area to Broadmead it now contains little notable architecture and acts as barrier between the Old City and Castle Park Bristol City Council are now seeking to repair this by redeveloping the area 2 Contents 1 History 2 Wine Street today 3 Listed buildings 4 Gallery 5 ReferencesHistory Edit Robert Ricart s map of Bristol in 1479 Wine Street is shown running north east from the High Cross Alta Crux Wine Street together with High Street Corn Street and Broad Street formed the earliest nucleus of Bristol 1 Ricart s Plan of 1479 one of the first English town plans shows Wine Street with the High Cross at one end and Newgate at the other the other three cross streets are also shown each ending at their own gate in the city wall 3 The name Wine Street is thought to be a corruption of Winch Street after a winch operated pillory which stood at the eastern end of the street 4 It was a commercial street from its earliest days in 1286 Thomas de Westone and his wife Roysia took out a lease on two shops there for thirty years at a poetical rent of a rose at the feast of St John the Baptist yearly 5 By the 14th century the four cross streets and Bristol Bridge were a clearly defined shopping centre Bristol Bridge the prime site was the location of jewellers and mercers High Street was home to wool drapers and linen drapers were to be found on Wine Street 6 Samuel Pepys his wife and servants came to the Horse Shoe Inn on Wine Street for a day in 1668 and described Bristol as in every way another London though he noted that there were no carts it generally stands on vaults only dog carts 5 In the early 17th century an open sided corn market was built in the middle of Wine Street 7 Shown on Millerd s Map of 1671 8 this was 18 feet 5 5 m wide by 80 feet 24 m long It left only a narrow passageway on either side for those who wished to go along the street and was demolished in 1727 Eventually a Cheese Market was erected between its former location and Mary le Port Street 9 Thomas Cadell who went on to make a fortune in bookselling and publishing was born on Wine Street in 1742 his father also Thomas Cadell was a bookseller 10 Robert Southey Poet Laureate from 1813 to 1843 was born on Wine Street in 1774 his father also named Robert Southey was a linen draper 11 Southey is commemorated by post war Southey House though Southey s birthplace was actually at the other end of the street 12 By the 1820s it seems the drapers of Wine Street were becoming complacent William Ablett came from London to manage a shop here and wrote that trade was conducted in a droning sort of way and shocked the local traders by his new fangled ideas about window dressing several times a week with lavish displays of shawls and bolts of fabric Thomas Jones whose department store started in Wine Street in 1843 was considered outrageous for selling not just drapery but anything that would make a profit His business grew into High Street and Mary le Port Street 13 and incorporated the Guard House 14 where soldiers had once been billeted during the Civil War 15 At the turn of the 20th century Wine Street still formed part of Bristol s chief shopping centre and contained many of Bristol s most exclusive shops and department stores In 1915 the globes and lanterns of its street lamps were painted blue to dim their light as an air raid precaution in the event Bristol suffered no aerial attacks during the First World War 16 Things were very different 25 years later however almost all buildings on Wine Street were destroyed or damaged beyond repair by aerial bombing on 24 November 1940 including the landmark Dutch House which stood on the corner of Wine Street and High Street 17 An eyewitness described the scene looking up Clare Street I was appalled at the view of Wine Street I could see All Saints Church intact but beyond the site of the old High Cross all detail was lost in one vast sheet of orange flame 18 Wine Street had for many centuries been an important shopping area and a key part of Bristol s pre war shopping axis which ran from Queens Road and Park Street through St Nicholas Market Wine Street and Castle Street and onwards to Old Market Street and Stapleton Road nonetheless post war planners decided to move Bristol s main shopping area to Broadmead where the larger sites required by the bigger retailers could be accommodated 19 Wine Street was widened in 1956 and new buildings were erected on the north side of the street 20 Plans for the area to the south of Wine Street to become a new Civic Centre including a city museum and art gallery were eroded by the leasing of the Bank of England and the Norwich Union sites and then dropped on the grounds of cost Finally it was decided to create a really splendid park Hugh Casson Neville Conder and Partners produced a plan for this but in the end the Parks Department laid out their own emasculated version of the park 21 Wine Street today EditThe north side of Wine Street now has just three buildings The Prudential Building now let out as office suites 22 across The Pithay the Vintry Building which also offers rental office suites 23 and Southey House now a block of 38 flats 24 Andrew Foyle in his Pevsner Architectural Guide to Bristol describes Wine Street as perhaps the saddest post Blitz transformation He is dismissive of the buildings on the north side berating the Prudential Building s dull stripped classicism and describing the Vintry Building and Southey House as singularly unimaginative He is scornful of the Bank of England building on the south side merely occupying the land with bleak fenestration and a puny entrance its weak extension weakly set back over a parking access ramp 25 Bristol City Council is seeking redevelopment of the area south of Wine Street and around Mary le Port Street to help connect the markets area with the shopping quarter at Broadmead This would include reducing the width of Wine Street to more closely resemble its historic proportions 26 The redevelopment of this area offer s perhaps the greatest potential of any site in the city to demonstrate the ambition of Bristol and to realise a connected and coherent historic core 2 Wine Street is within the Old City and Queen Square Conservation Area 27 Listed buildings EditThere are no listed buildings on Wine Street There is however one unlisted building of merit Number Grade Year listed DescriptionUnlisted building of merit n a Prudential Buildings 27 Gallery Edit South side of Wine Street with the entrance to the Guard house 17th century Millerd s Map of 1671 showing Corn Market marked O in middle of Wine Street Corn Market Wine Street Vintry Building Bank of England building with mediaeval crossroads beyond Entrance to Southey HouseReferences Edit a b Watts Lorna Rahtz Philip 1985 Mary le Port Bristol Excavations 1962 3 City of Bristol Museums and Art Gallery pp 16 17 ISBN 0 900199 26 1 a b The City Centre Framework Old City character statement and place plan PDF Bristol City Council City Design Group 2018 pp 4 6 Retrieved 10 May 2018 Plan of Bristol from Ricart s calendar Bristol Archives Bristol City Council Retrieved 10 May 2018 Smith Veronica 2001 The Street Names of Bristol Broadcast Books p 319 ISBN 1 874092 90 7 a b Wells Charles 1969 Bristol s History Reece Winstone pp 53 54 ISBN 0 900814 29 2 Reid Helen 1987 Bristol amp Co Redcliffe Press p 7 ISBN 0 948265 61 2 Wells Charles 1969 Bristol s History Reece Winstone p 39 ISBN 0 900814 29 2 Millerd s The Citty of Bristoll Bristol Museums Galleries Archives Retrieved 29 April 2018 Wells Charles 1969 Bristol s History Reece Winstone p 58 ISBN 0 900814 29 2 Groom Nick 2016 Thomas Chatterton and Romantic Culture Springer p 108 ISBN 9780230390225 Carnall Geoffrey 2004 Southey Robert 1774 1843 poet and reviewer Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press Retrieved 26 August 2012 subscription or UK public library membership required Winstone Reece 1979 Plate 43 Bristol as it Was 1928 1933 ISBN 0 900814 57 8 Reid Helen 1987 Bristol amp Co Redcliffe Press p 37 ISBN 0 948265 61 2 Winstone Reece 1984 Plate 18 Bristol as it Was 1879 1874 ISBN 0 900814 64 0 Wells Charles 1969 Bristol s History Reece Winstone p 56 ISBN 0 900814 29 2 David J Eveleigh 1999 A Century of Bristol Sutton p 34 ISBN 0 7509 2426 8 Besley James Reid Helen 1990 West at War Redcliffe Press Limited p 49 ISBN 0 948 265 64 7 Winstone Reece 1980 Bristol in the 1940s Reece Winstone p 22 ISBN 0 900814 61 6 Hasegawa Junichi 1992 Replanning the blitzed city centre Open University Press pp 90 95 ISBN 0 335 15633 9 Winstone Reece 1980 plate 60 Bristol as it was 1950 1953 Reece Winstone ISBN 9780900814358 Priest Gordon Cobb Pamela 1980 The Fight for Bristol Bristol Civic Society and The Redcliffe Press p 82 Newly Refurbished Office Suites in Bristol City Centre To Let Prudential Building Wine Street Bristol Avon BS1 2PH GVA Retrieved 10 May 2018 Vintry Building Ashville Group Retrieved 10 May 2018 Bristol Residential Development Survey Report 2017 Schedules Bristol City Council 2017 p 26 Retrieved 10 May 2018 Foyle Andrew 2004 Pevsner Architectural Guides Bristol Yale University Press p 152 ISBN 0 300 10442 1 Bristol Central Area Plan PDF Bristol City Council 2015 pp 60 61 Retrieved 5 June 2018 a b Conservation Area No 4 City and Queen Square Character Appraisal PDF Bristol City Council Retrieved 3 May 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wine Street Bristol amp oldid 1055191032, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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