'Moorgate' was one of the minor gates of the old
London Wall. Though the gate itself was demolished in 1761, the name survives as a major street in the heart of the
City of London. The street connects the city to
Islington, and was constructed around 1846 for the formation of new approaches to
London Bridge.
The name "Moorgate" derives from the surrounding area of
Moorfields, which was one of the last pieces of open land in the city. Today this region is a
financial centre, and is home to several of the
United Kingdom's major
investment and
commercial banks. The street also showcases historic and contemporary office buildings, including the
Guildhall and the
Moorhouse.
The
Moorgate station on the
London Underground is widely remembered for the
Moorgate tube crash of 1975. In the incident, a train terminating at the station failed to stop and crashed into a brick wall, and 43 people were killed. This resulted in systems being installed on the Underground which automatically stop trains at dead-ends, which have become known as
Moorgate control.
History

An engraving showing Moorgate before it was demolished in 1762
The earliest descriptions of Moorgate date from the early 15th century, where it was described as only a
postern in the
London city wall. Located between
Bishopsgate and
Cripplegate and leading to a
moor known as
Moorfields, it was not one of the larger or more important of the city gates.
In 1415 an
ordinance enacted that the old postern be demolished. It was replaced with a newer and larger structure located further to the west, which included a wooden
gate to be shut at night. This gate was enlarged again in 1472 and 1511, and then damaged in the
Great Fire of London. Although the city gates had ceased to have any modern function apart from decoration, it was replaced along with
Ludgate,
Newgate, and
Temple Bar with a stone gate in 1672.
Moorgate was demolished with all the other London city wall gates in 1761, and the resulting stone was sold for £166 to the
Corporation of London to support the
starlings of the newly widened centre arch of the
London Bridge. Little Moorgate was a gate opposite
Little Winchester Street leading into
Moorfields. It was demolished by 1755, however it gave its name to a street taken down by the construction of the railways.
The
Moorfields were one of the last pieces of open land in the City of London. The fields were divided into three areas: the Moorfields proper, just inside the City boundaries, north of
Bethlem Royal Hospital (also known as Bedlam, the world's oldest
psychiatric hospital), and Middle and Upper Moorfields (both also open fields) to the north. Much of Moorfields was developed in 1777 and turned into present day
Finsbury Circus.
Today, the name survives in the name of the
Catholic parish of
St. Mary Moorfields; Moorfields the short street parallel with Moorgate; and Moorfields Highwalk, one of the pedestrian "streets" at high level in the
Barbican Estate.
In addition, the London Dispensary for curing diseases of the Eye and Ear was founded on the Moorfields in 1805, and evolved to become the present
Moorfields Eye Hospital, which is now located on
City Road (known popularly from the second verse of the
nursery rhyme ''
Pop Goes the Weasel''), and is close to
Old Street station.
Moorfields was the site of the first
hydrogen balloon flight in
England, when Italian
Vincenzo Lunardi took off on the afternoon of
15 September 1784. Lunardi flew in a
hydrogen balloon from the area of the
Honourable Artillery Company near Moorfields (where it still is to this day, occupying a site next to City Road). The ascent took place in front of 100,000 spectators as well as the then
Prince of Wales,
George, Duke of Cornwall. The envelope of the balloon was made of oiled
silk, and had a diameter of 33
ft (10
metres) which resulted in a volume of 18,200
cubic feet (515
m³). Due to the size of the balloon, it took all of the previous evening and early morning to fill it. Lunardi first landed at
Welham Green (North Mymms),
Hertfordshire, 13
miles (21
km) north of
London (where the landing is commemorated with a stone, at a location now known as Balloon Corner) and then continued his flight to land at
Ware,
Hertfordshire after flying a total of 24 miles.
Moorgate Street and neighbourhood
The contemporary street of Moorgate runs north from
Princes Street and
Lothbury near the location of the
Bank of England, past London Wall and the location of the old gate, and then continues north. It is located inside the
EC2 postal district. After leaving the
City of London in the direction of the
London Borough of Islington, the street is known as
Finsbury Pavement, which at one time was known as Moor Fields Pavement, and then City Road. The street was constructed around 1846 as one of the new approaches to
London Bridge. While the street was formally known as "Moorgate Street", the street part of the name eventually fell out of use.
The street is lined with offices of several major
commercial banks and
investment banks. A new commercial development on Moorgate, known as
Moorhouse, opened in 2005. The building is located at the corner of Moorgate and London Wall, and was designed by
Foster and Partners. The building has 28,000
m² of office space in 19 storeys, and is built in the location of a smaller office building built in the 1960s known as Moor House. The building incorporates part of
Crossrail's new station and ticket hall serving Liverpool Street and Moorgate.

The Guildhall, image courtesy of the Corporation of London
There is a campus of the
London Metropolitan University, formerly a part of the
London Guildhall University, on Moorgate. The campus houses its business school, a
library, and other administrative facilities. There is a small side street to the east off of Moorgate, known as Moorgate Place. It now connects to another side street known as Swan Alley, in turn connecting to Moorgate. The side street is the location of the Chartered Accountants' Hall, home of the
Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, as well as The St.James's Place Partnership, a wealth management company owned by HBOS.
The
Guildhall is connected to
Moorgate station via Bassishaw Highwalk. The Guildhall is the home of the
Corporation of London and the centre of City government since the
Middle Ages. Adjacent and internally connected to the Guildhall is the
Guildhall Art Gallery, which houses the art collection of the City of London. It occupies a stone building in a semi-
Gothic style which was completed in 1999 to replace an earlier building destroyed in 1941.
Finsbury Circus, an oval-shaped
circus, branches east out of Moorgate, sitting on the site of the old Bethlem Hospital and part of Moorfields. The gardens in the centre of the circus occupy a 5,000 square metre (1.2
acres) plot enclosed by railings, and include the immaculate lawn of the City of London Bowls Club. Built in 1814, it is unusual amongst London's
squares in being
elliptical, with the
major axis oriented west-east. According to the
National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens, the garden is
Grade II listed.
The London branch of the
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi is located at 12-15 Finsbury Circus.
BP's headquarters were previously at 1 Finsbury Circus (it is now at 1
St. James's Square).
Moorgate is also the birthplace of
John Keats, one of the principal
poets in the
English Romantic movement. Keats was born in 1795 in the Swan and Hoop Inn at 199 Moorgate, where his father was an
ostler. The pub is now called "The John Keats at Moorgate", having previously been known as "The Moorgate Coffee House" and "The Moorgate", only a few yards from Moorgate station.
Redevelopment of the area
A number of large buildings are being planned in the neighbouring streets. These include a 43-storey, 140m residential skyscraper at Milton Court, which would be taller than
CityPoint. A 90m office tower at Ropemaker Place is also being developed by
British Land, with construction already underway. In addition, the investment firm
JP Morgan are planning a huge 1 million square foot headquarters on Fore Street, which would become one of the largest buildings in London.
See also
References
;Books and articles
★ Lange, D. ''The Queen's London: A Pictorial and Descriptive Record of the Streets, Buildings, Parks and Scenery of the Great Metropolis''. Cassell and Company, London, 1896.
★ Harris, C. M. ''What's in a name? The origins of the names of all stations in current use on the London Underground and Docklands Light rail with their opening dates.'' Midas Books and
London Transport, fourth edition, 2001. ISBN 1-85414-241-0.
★ Mills, A. D. ''Dictionary of London Place Names''.
Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-19-860957-4.
★ Rocque, J. ''Rocque's Map of London''. 1746 and 1763.
★ Harben, H. A. ''A Dictionary of London''. 1918.
★ Stow, J. ''Survey of London''. 1720 and 1755. 2 volumes.
★
Colvin, S. ''John Keats - Biography''. 1887.
★ Motion, A. ''Keats''.
University of Chicago Press, 1998. ISBN 0-374-18100-4.
★ Holloway, S. ''Moorgate: Anatomy of a Railway Disaster''. Trafalgar Square Publishing, 1989. ISBN 0-7153-8913-0.
★ Bacon, J. M. ''The Dominion of the Air'', Chapter 3.
Online extract.
;Other web sites
★
Metronet history of the Circle Line. Retrieved
31 March 2005.
★
Metronet history of the Hammersmith and City Line. Retrieved
31 March 2005.
★
Start of construction of Moorhouse kicks off Crossrail in the City of London. Crossrail press release,
18 June 2002.
External links
★
BBC News account of the 1975 crash
★
Moorgate station. Official homepage of the station from
Metronet.
★
John Rocque's Map of London - 1746.
★
Streetmap.co.uk. The map is centred on the Moorgate campus of
London Metropolitan University.
★
BBC nature walks - Roman London and a geological walk of the world.
;The John Keats at Moorgate
★
Globe / John Keats at Moorgate from
www.fancyapint.com.
★
The John Keats at Moorgate from Harbottle's Pub Guide.
;Major buildings
★
Emporis information on the new Moorhouse
★
Emporis information on the old Moor House
★
CapitaLand homepage on 25 Moorgate
★
Corporation of London homepage on Guildhall
;Vincenzo Lunardi
★
Hydrogen balloon model. Site with information about the balloon attempt and a model of the hydrogen balloon. Retrieved
8 April 2005.
★
Flights of fancy. Site with information about the balloon attempt. Retrieved
8 April 2005.
★
Balloon Corner, Welham Green. Site with picture of the stone marking the landing spot of Lunardi's balloon at Welham Green. Accessed
9 October 2005
★
Streetmap.co.uk showing Welham Green and Ware in Hertfordshire.