
Strand, May 2001
'Strand' is a street in the
City of Westminster. It currently starts at
Trafalgar Square and runs east to join
Fleet Street at
Temple Bar, which marks the boundary of the City of London at this point, though its
historical length has been longer than that.
The street is popularly referred to as 'The Strand' although the street address is actually just "Strand", hence, strictly speaking, "366 Strand" and not "366, The Strand". On the
Monopoly board it is written as "Strand", while on the title deed card it is "The Strand".
Two tube stations were once named after it: the former Piccadily line
Strand tube station, now called
Aldwych but no longer in use, and the former "Strand tube station" on the Northern Line now part of
Charing Cross tube station.
History
Etymology
Strand derives its name from the
Old English word for "shore" or "river bank". (
Danish/
Norwegian/
Icelandic,
Finnish,
German and
Dutch have also derived their word for "beach" from the same Germanic root; many beaches in Ireland are still called "strands"). Prior to the construction of the
Thames Embankment in the 19th century the street ran directly alongside the
River Thames. One of its
churches may originate from that time.
Origins

Strand, WC2, City of Westminster
Along with
Aldwych, it has been a major settlement area since Saxon times outside of the old Roman city walls, as well as a route between the ruins of the old Roman city of Londinium and the new Saxon city of Lundenwic, and later in the Middle Ages between the separate settlements of the
City of London (the civil and commercial centre) and the Royal
Palace of Westminster (the national political centre). Until the 16th or 17th century its only rival as a link of development and activity between these places was the
River Thames, and as such contained several palaces inhabited by bishops and royal courtiers:
★
Durham House
★
Somerset House
★
Northumberland House, demolished circa 1866
★
Savoy Palace, demolished 1381
★
York House, Strand
★
Arundel House
★ Inn, or residence, of the
Bishop of Carlisle [1]
★
Cecil House
★
Suffolk House
These had their own ''river gates'' and landings directly onto the Thames. The line of buildings on the Strand only became separated from the river with the construction of the
Victoria Embankment in 1865-70.
In the
Victorian era, the Strand became a fashionable address. Many avant-garde writers and thinkers gathered here, among them
Thomas Carlyle,
Charles Dickens,
William Makepeace Thackeray,
John Stuart Mill,
Herbert Spencer, and the scientist
Thomas Henry Huxley. ''142 Strand'' was the home of radical publisher and physician John Chapman
[1] (1821-1894), who not only published many of his contemporaries from this house during the 1850s, but also edited the ''
Westminster Review'' for 42 years. The American poet
Ralph Waldo Emerson was also a house guest.
Virginia Woolf also writes about the Strand in several of her essays, including "Street Haunting: A London Adventure."
Theatre
The Strand was the hub of Victorian theatre and nightlife. However, redevelopment of the East Strand and the construction of the
Aldwych and
Kingsway roads in the 1890s and early years of the twentieth century led to the loss of the
Opera Comique, the
Globe, the
Royal Strand Theatre and the nearby
Olympic Theatre. Other lost theatres on the Strand include the
Gaiety Theatre (closed in 1939, building demolished in 1957),
Terry's Theatre (converted into a cinema 1910, demolished 1923), the
Tivoli (closed 1914 and later demolished; in 1923 the Tivoli Cinema opened on the site and was closed and demolished in 1957 to make way for Peter Robinson's store) and the
Sans Souci Theatre (this was a very early theatre on the Strand, extant 1791-1796).
Surviving theatres include the
Adelphi Theatre, the
Savoy Theatre and
Vaudeville Theatre and, closely adjacent in
Wellington Street, the
Lyceum Theatre.
The Song
The Strand is the subject of a famous
music hall song
Let's All Go Down The Strand (words and music by Harry Castling and C. W. Murphy), which dilates on its merits as a place of entertainment and relaxation as compared to the
Rhineland:
:One night a half 'a dozen tourists
:Spent the night together in Trafalgar Square.
:A fortnight's tour on the Continent was planned,
:And each had his portmanteau in his hand.
:Down the Rhine they meant to have a picnic
:Til' Jones said, "I must decline--"
:"Boys you'll be advised by me
:to stay away from Germany--
:What's the good a' going down the Rhine."
:"Let's All Go.....cont.
:Let's all go down the Strand -- Have a banana!
:Let's all go down the Strand!
:I'll be the leader, you can march behind.
:Come with me and see what we can find!
:Let's all go down the Strand -- Have a banana!
:Oh! What a happy land.
:That's the place fer fun and noise,
:All among the girls and boys.
:So let's all go down to the Strand.
Prominent buildings

A 19th century print showing St Mary-Le-Strand and the Strand front of
Somerset House.

St. Clement Danes church, near Fleet Street
★
Australia House
★
Bush House (whose address is "BBC World Service, Strand, London WC2B 4PH, UK" but whose main entrance is on the North side facing
Aldwych and
Kingsway)
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King's College London, whose main campus (called the Strand Campus) is located off this street, next to Somerset House
★
Royal Courts of Justice
★
Shell Mex House
★
Simpson's-in-the-Strand
★
Savoy Hotel
★
Strand Palace Hotel
★ The
Adelphi Theatre
★
Savoy Theatre
★
Twinings
Churches
Two of the churches in the Strand now stand on island sites amidst the traffic.
St Clement Danes is believed to date back to the 9th century, but the present building is mainly a 17th century work by Sir
Christopher Wren.
St Mary-le-Strand was designed by James Gibbs and completed in 1717, to replace one demolished by
Protector Somerset for building material for his adjacent
Somerset House.
See also
★ ''
Strand Magazine''
References
1. Rosemary Ashton, ''142 Strand: A Radical Address in Victorian London'', (2006)
★ Raymond Mander and Joe Mitchenson (1968) ''The Lost Theatres of London''. Rupert Hart-Davis.
External links
★
142 Strand, Shady Old Lady's Guide to London