The World's Largest Public Domain Media Search Engine
ONL (1887) 1.132 - Bangor House, 1818

Similar

ONL (1887) 1.132 - Bangor House, 1818

description

Summary

Site of the London residence of the Bishop of Bangor from 1378 to 1647, located in a close to the north-west of Shoe Lane.
"Bishop Dolben, who died in 1633 (Charles I.), was the last Welsh bishop who deigned to reside in a neighbourhood from which wealth and fashion was fast ebbing... In 1647 (Charles I.) Sir John Birkstead purchased of the Parliamentary trustees the bishop's lands, that had probably been confiscated, to build streets upon the site. But Sir John went on paving the old place, and never built at all. Cromwell's Act of 1657, to check the increase of London, entailed a special exemption in his favour. At the Restoration, the land returned to its Welsh bishop; but it had degenerated—the palace was divided into several residences, and mean buildings sprang up like fungi around it. A drawing of Malcolm's, early in the century, shows us its two Tudor windows. Latterly it became divided into wretched rooms, and two or three hundred poor people, chiefly Irish, herded in them... Brayley says that a part of the old episcopal garden still existed in 1759 (George II.); and, indeed, as Mr. Jesse records, even as late as 1828 (George IV.) a portion of the old mansion still lingered. The house was entirely pulled down in the autumn of 1828.

date_range

Date

1873
create

Source

British Library
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain, from the British Library's collections, 2013

Explore more

history
history