'Norton Folgate' is a short length of street in
London, connecting
Bishopsgate with
Shoreditch High Street on the northern edge of its financial district, the
City of London. It constitutes a very small section of the
A10 road, the former
Roman Ermine Street.
History
Its name is a reminder of the tiny ancient
liberty and parish
[1] of Norton Folgate situated in and around this area. This was a distinct administrative unit between the
Bishopsgate ward of the City to the south and the
parish of St Leonard, Shoreditch to the north. Its origin was as the area of land occupied by the inner precinct of the Priory and Hospital of St Mary Spital. This was
dissolved during the
Reformation, but the land, reverting to
the Crown, retained its status as an extra-parochial liberty. Within the 8.7 acres of the former liberty are Folgate Street and Spittle Square in
Spitalfields to the east and a small area of land between Primrose Street and Worship Street on the west side of the main road.
[2]
It is noted as the sometime residence of the playwright
Christopher Marlowe. The theatrical association continued, with the construction in
1837 of the ''City of London Theatre'', here, by the architect Samuel Beazley. The theatre specialised in "domestic" and
temperance drama, and closed in
1868. Performances included
The Pickwick Papers between March and April
1837; and
Nicholas Nickelby in Nov and Dec
1838.
[3]
The liberty was abolished in 1900
[4] and was divided between the
Metropolitan Borough of Stepney and the
Metropolitan Borough of Shoreditch. A
civil parish of Norton Folgate in the
County of London existed between
1889 until it was absorbed by the parish of
Whitechapel in
1921.
[5]
Norton Folgate was also the site of the
London Gas Light and Coke Company, the works, also known as the 'Curtain Road Works', were established from about
1812, when the Company received a contract to light
Bishopsgate and supply the surrounding area with gas. The site obtained was cramped, and riddled with springs. The Company was applying novel chemistry (devised by Fredrick Winsor) on an industrial scale, and these factors resulted in the Company paying substantial fines for non-delivery. The site was in operation from about
1820 to
1871, when the new works at
Beckton took over supply for much of London. The site was then used as a coal siding - for coaling trains at
Broad Street and
Liverpool Street. Latterly it was used as a yard for taxis, before redevelopment in about
2000.
[6]
Population and area
The liberty of Norton Folgate covered 10 acres. The population as recorded in the Census was:
'Liberty of Norton Folgate 1801-1901'
| Year[7] | 1801 | 1811 | 1821 | 1831 | 1841 | 1851 | 1861 | 1871 | 1881 | 1891 | 1901 |
|---|
| Population | 1,752 | 1,716 | 1,896 | 1,918 | 1,674 | 1,771 | 1,873 | 1,550 | 1,528 | 1,449 | 1,663 |
|---|
Nearest railway station
★
Liverpool Street station
References
1. Vision of Britain - Norton Folgate parish
2. Thomas, C., Sloane, B., and Phillpotts, C. (1997) ''Excavations at the Priory and Hospital of St Mary Spital, London''. Museum of London.
3. Theatres in Victorian London accessed on 21 Dec 2006
4. 'The Manor and Liberty of Norton Folgate', Survey of London: volume 27: Spitalfields and Mile End New Town (1957), pp. 15-20.
5. F A Youngs, ''Guide to the Administrative Units of England'', Vol. I, 1979
6. Hackney History Volume 7
7. Statistical Abstract for London, 1901 (Vol. IV) - Census tables for Liberty of Norton Folgate.
External links
★
Large scale 1885 Map of the Liberty and surrounding area
★
Hidden London: Norton Folgate
★
Local administration of Norton Folgate
★
Tower Hamlets Archives
★
Survey of London Vol 27: Norton Folgate