Shoreditch

Shoreditch

Shoreditch Town Hall
Shoreditch
Shoreditch shown within Greater London
OS grid reference TQ325825
 Charing Cross 2.5 mi (4.0 km) WSW
London borough
Ceremonial county Greater London
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town LONDON
Postcode district E1, E2
Postcode district EC1, EC2
Postcode district N1
Dialling code 020
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
EU Parliament London
UK Parliament
London Assembly

Shoreditch is an inner city district in the historic East End of London in modern East London[1] within the London Borough of Hackney and in parts of London Borough of Tower Hamlets, lying immediately to the north and north east of the City of London.

The districts of Hoxton and Haggerston are part of Shoreditch, but the Shoreditch High Street railway station lies just outside, in the Bethnal Green area of Tower Hamlets.

History

Etymology

The etymology of "Shoreditch" is debated. One legend holds that the place was originally named "Shore's Ditch", after Jane Shore, the mistress of Edward IV, who is supposed to have died or been buried in a ditch in the area. This legend is commemorated today by a large painting, at Haggerston Branch Library, of Jane Shore being retrieved from the ditch, and by a design on glazed tiles in a shop in Shoreditch High Street showing her meeting Edward IV.[2]

However, the area was known as "Soersditch" long before Jane Shore's life. A more plausible origin for the name is "Sewer Ditch", in reference to a drain or watercourse in what was once a boggy area.[3] It may have referred to the headwaters of the Walbrook, which rose in the Curtain Road area.

In another theory, antiquarian John Weever claimed that the name derived from Sir John de Soerdich, who was lord of the manor during the reign of Edward III (132777).[4]

Origins

Shoreditch church

Though now part of Inner London, Shoreditch was previously an extramural suburb of the City of London, centred on Shoreditch Church at the crossroads where Shoreditch High Street and Kingsland Road are crossed by Old Street and Hackney Road.

Shoreditch High Street and Kingsland Road are a small sector of the Roman Ermine Street and modern A10. Known also as the Old North Road, it was a major coaching route to the north, exiting the City at Bishopsgate. The east–west course of Old Street–Hackney Road was also probably originally a Roman Road, connecting Silchester with Colchester, bypassing the City of London to the south.[5]

Shoreditch Church (dedicated to St Leonard) is of ancient origin and features in the famous line "when I grow rich say the bells of Shoreditch", from the nursery rhyme "Oranges and Lemons".

Shoreditch was the site of a house of canonesses, the Augustinian Holywell Priory (named after a Holy Well on the site), from the 12th century until its dissolution in 1539. This priory was located between Shoreditch High Street and Curtain Road to east and west, and Batemans Row and Holywell Lane to north and south. Nothing remains of it today.[6]

Elizabethan theatre

Memorial to Elizabethan actors buried in Shoreditch church

In 1576, James Burbage built the first playhouse in England, known as "The Theatre", on the site of the Priory (commemorated today by a plaque on Curtain Road, and excavated in 2008, by MoLAS).[7] Some of Shakespeare's plays were performed here and at the nearby Curtain Theatre, built the following year and 200 yards (183 m) to the south (marked by a commemorative plaque in Hewett Street off Curtain Road). It was here that Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet gained "Curtain plaudits", and where Henry V was performed within "this wooden O". Shakespeare's Company moved the timbers of "The Theatre" to Southwark at the expiration of the lease in 1599, in order to construct The Globe. The Curtain continued performing plays in Shoreditch until at least 1627.[8]

The suburb of Shoreditch was attractive as a location for these early theatres because it was outside the jurisdiction of the somewhat puritanical City fathers. Even so, they drew the wrath of contemporary moralists as did the local "base tenements and houses of unlawful and disorderly resort" and the "great number of dissolute, loose, and insolent people harboured in such and the like noisome and disorderly houses, as namely poor cottages, and habitations of beggars and people without trade, stables, inns, alehouses, taverns, garden-houses converted to dwellings, ordinaries, dicing houses, bowling alleys, and brothel houses".[9]

During the 17th century, wealthy traders and Huguenot silkweavers moved to the area, establishing a textile industry centred to the south around Spitalfields. By the 19th century Shoreditch was also the locus of the furniture industry, now commemorated in the Geffrye Museum on Kingsland Road. However, the area declined along with both textile and furniture industries, and by the end of the 19th century Shoreditch was a byword for crime, prostitution and poverty. This situation was not improved by extensive devastation of the housing stock in the Blitz during the Second World War and by insensitive redevelopment in the post-war period.

Victorian entertainments

1867 Poster from the National Standard Theatre
1907 Hetty King sheet music, expressing a concern of modern residents
The Crowne Plaza Hotel, Shoreditch

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Shoreditch was a centre of entertainment to rival the West End and boasted many theatres and music halls:

None of these places of entertainment survives today. Music hall was revived for a brief time in Curtain Road by the temporary home of the Brick Lane Music Hall.[12] This too has now moved on.

A number of playbills and posters from these music halls survive in the collections of both the Bishopsgate Institute and the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Geography

1755 Stow's Map of Shoreditch
Districts within the London Borough of Hackney.

The historic heart of Shoreditch is Shoreditch High Street and Shoreditch Church. In the past the area of Shoreditch was defined by the borders of the parish of Shoreditch, which later defined the borders of the Metropolitan Borough of Shoreditch. Since 1965, when the latter unit of local government was dissolved, it has been more fuzzily defined. Hoxton to the north of Old Street was historically part of Shoreditch parish and borough, and is still often conflated with it.

To the north and west of Shoreditch is Old Street and Hoxton (and the southern end of Hackney Road) on the street of the same name (Old Street) while to the south it is met with Bishopsgate though the various side streets and with the northern end of Commercial Road and Quaker Street acting as the southern border with Spitalfields, and the very southeast boundary being shared with Whitechapel on Buxton Street and Vallence Road. With the boundaries with Bethnal Green being Brick Lane (south end), the Great Eastern Main Line and Chilton Road, Sharklewel Street, Brick Lane (north end), Swanfield Street and Vinginia Road.

Administration

A map showing the wards of Shoreditch Metropolitan Borough as they appeared in 1916.

The medieval parish of Shoreditch (St Leonard's) was once part of the county of Middlesex, but became part of the new County of London in 1889. The parish remained the local administrative unit until the creation of the Metropolitan Borough of Shoreditch in 1899. The Borough was made up of three districts—Shoreditch, Hoxton and Haggerston—and administered from Shoreditch Town Hall, which can still be seen on Old Street. It has been restored and is now run by the Shoreditch Town Hall Trust. Shoreditch was incorporated into the much larger London Borough of Hackney in 1965.

Contemporary culture

Shoreditch has, since around 1996, become a popular and fashionable part of London. Often conflated with neighbouring Hoxton, the area has been subject to considerable gentrification in the past twenty years, with accompanying rises in land and property prices.

More recently, during the second 'dot-com' boom, the both the area and Old Street has become popular with London-based web technology companies who base their head offices around the new tech district East London Tech City. These include Last.fm, Dopplr, Songkick, SocialGO and 7digital. These companies have tended to gravitate towards Old Street Roundabout, giving rise to the term "Silicon Roundabout" to describe the area, as used by Prime Minister David Cameron in a speech in November 2010.[13]

Formerly a predominantly working-class area, Shoreditch and Hoxton have, in recent years, been gentrified by the creative industries and those who work in them. Former industrial buildings have been converted to offices and flats, while Curtain Road and Old Street are notable for their clubs and pubs which offer a variety of venues to rival those of the West End. Art galleries, bars, restaurants, media businesses and the building of the Hackney Community College campus are further features of this transformation.

In fact, the word Shoreditch is now synonymous with the concept of contemporary 'hipsterfication' of regenerated urban areas. As a pioneer among similar transformations across the UK, various phrases have been coined, from "Shoreditchification" to "Very Shoreditch".[14]

In September 2015, a demonstration against gentrification in London took the form of a protest at Cereal Killer Cafe, a hipster café on Brick Lane which serves cereal.[15]

Reconstruction

South Shoreditch is currently undergoing an enormous transformation. Several five- or six-storey buildings have been knocked down in the area of Shoreditch that borders the City of London. In their place will be erected a variety of very tall buildings, mirroring the architectural styles in the City.[16] The developments will result in more residential units being available for sale in Shoreditch than were produced by the Olympics athletes' village.[16]

South Shoreditch undergoing reconstruction in 2015

Notable local residents

Education

Schools in the area include,

Transport

Private transportation

Roads

In the mid-1960s, the main streets of Shoreditch (Old Street, Shoreditch High Street and Curtain Road, Great Eastern Street) were formed into a mile-long one-way system, which became associated with traffic congestion, poor conditions for walking and cycling, high speeds, high collision rates, and delays for bus services. The gyratory system came to be seen as "the main factor holding back the cultural regeneration of South Shoreditch"[17] and "a block to economic recovery".[18] Following a lengthy campaign,[19] the then newly formed Transport for London agreed to revert most of the streets to two-way working, a project which was completed in late 2002.

Public transportation

Buses

London Buses provides all local bus services the district, 8, 135, 205, 388 and night routes N8 and N205 in South Shoreditch and 26, 35, 47, 48, 67, 78 and night route N26 in Central Shoreditch, 55, 149, 242, 243 and night route N55 in North Shoreditch and D prefix route D3 in South East Shoreditch.[20][21][22]

London Overground
The railway bridge on Kingsland Road – an essential part of the East London Line extension. (September 2005)

In 2005 funding was announced for the East London Line Extension which would extend the existing line from Whitechapel tube station bypassing Shoreditch tube station (which closed in June 2006) and creating a new station titled Shoreditch High Street, this is now served by London Overground services at the site of the old Bishopsgate Goods Yard which was demolished in 2004.

London Underground

While Shoreditch has no access to the London Underground since 2006 when Shoreditch tube station was shut down on the East London line, there has since been discussions of creating an interchange with the Central line between Liverpool Street and Bethnal Green at Shoreditch High Street which runs almost underneath the station. However, this would not be able to happen until after the Crossrail 1 project is complete, due to extreme crowding on the Central line during peak hours.


Disused stations

See also

References

  1. "London's Places" (PDF). London Plan. Greater London Authority. 2011. p. 46. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  2. Clunn, H.P. (1970) The Face of London. Spring Books: London. pp. 312, 493
  3. Mander 1996, p. 13.
  4. Timbs, John (1855). Curiosities of London: Exhibiting the Most Rare and Remarkable Objects of Interest in the Metropolis. D. Bogue. p. 729.
  5. Sugden n.d.
  6. Wood 2003.
  7. Shakespeare's Shoreditch theatre unearthed Maev Kennedy, The Guardian, Thursday, 7 August 2008
  8. Shapiro 2005.
  9. Middlesex Justices in 1596; cited in Schoenbaum 1987, p. 126.
  10. "Shoreditch Theatres and Halls". Arthur Lloyd. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  11. "Shoreditch Empire" (PDF). Over the Footlights. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  12. "Brick Lane Music Hall".
  13. Duncan Geere. "Transcript: David Cameron sets out Britain's hi-tech future". Wired.
  14. "Why this 'Shoreditchification' of London must stop". The Daily Telegraph.
  15. Feargus O'Sullivan (30 September 2015). "Breakfast of Gentrifiers How a London café that specializes in cereal became the latest flashpoint in the city’s ongoing gentrification debate.". CityLab. Retrieved 30 September 2015. When Londoners talk about regeneration, gentrification and the supposed cascade of bars, beards and real estate bubbles they bring in their wake, they typically talk about the café’s home neighborhood of Shoreditch.
  16. 1 2 "Three More Shoreditch Skyscraper Proposals". Londonist. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
  17. Teo Greenstraat of The Circus Space, quoted in More Light, More Power, No. 6, Autumn 2000
  18. Michael Pyner of Shoreditch New Deal Trust, quoted in More Light, More Power, No. 6, Autumn 2000
  19. The long road back to a two-way Shoreditch Hackney Cyclists, 2002
  20. https://tfl.gov.uk/bus/stop/490005524E/shoreditch-high-street-station/
  21. https://tfl.gov.uk/bus/stop/490006398K/shoreditch-high-street-station?
  22. https://tfl.gov.uk/bus/stop/490010585X/shoreditch-town-hall?lineId=35

Notes

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