Crown Street, West side
Hog Lane (later Crown Street) was a highway of
immemorial antiquity which extended (in terms of
the modern street layout) from Oxford Street to
Cambridge Circus and then curved south-east
to join the northern end of Upper St. Martin's
Lane. Its course is marked on the plan of 1585
(Plate 1a). It formed the boundary between the
parishes of St. Martin in the Fields (and after
1686 of St. Anne) on the west and St. Giles in
the Fields on the east. In the eighteenth century
the northern part of the lane gradually became
known as Crown Street (probably so named from
the Crown public house which stood at its north-eastern extremity) and the southern part, to the
south-east of Cambridge Circus, as West Street,
In the 1880's the Metropolitan Board of Works
formed the northern part of Charing Cross Road
by widening Crown Street on its east side. The
line of frontage of the west side of Crown Street
remained substantially unaltered, and a few decrepit
buildings still survive on this side of Charing
Cross Road to proclaim that, to the north of
Cambridge Circus, this Victorian thoroughfare
marks the course of a much older highway.
Building on the west side of Hog Lane appears
to have begun in the second half of the seventeenth
century, and to have been completed in the
1690's. (ref. 115) By 1690 Jaques Wiseman and Samuel
Fortrey had built a sewer in Hog Lane, and John
Meard and Isaac Symball were both building
houses here at this time. (ref. 116)
In 1720 Strype described Hog Lane as 'very
ordinary' and 'a Place not over well built or
inhabited'. (ref. 117) The large number of inns in the
street demonstrates the importance of Crown
Street as a line of communication between Tottenham Court Road and the areas of the Strand
and Covent Garden. On the west side there were
the King's Arms (now the Cambridge, at the
corner of Moor Street), the Coach and Horses
(which still exists at the north corner of Old
Compton Street), the Bull's Head (formerly at
No. 103 Charing Cross Road), the Plough
(formerly on the site of No. 111), the Rose and
Crown (formerly at the south corner of Rose,
now Manette, Street), the George (which still
exists as the Royal George at the south corner of
Goslett Yard) and the King's Head (now the
Excelsior at No. 167), as well as the Crown at
the corner of Crown Street and St. Giles's High
Street.
For the Greek Church (later St. Mary's,
Crown Street) and the almshouses of the parish
of St. Martin in the Fields see Chapter XI.
References
| 115. |
Faithorne and Newcourt's, Ogilby and Morgan's,
and Blome's maps. |
| 116. |
G.L.R.O., WCS43, pp. 99, 101–2, 150, 352;
ibid., 44, p. 97. |
| 117. |
John Strype, A Survey of the Cities of London and
Westminster, 1720, vol. II, bk. IV, p. 76; vol.
II, bk. VI, p. 87. |