As well as finding the locations of my father’s photos, it is fascinating to see how London has changed compared to any old photo, and the three volume set of Wonderful London from the 1920s is a fantastic source to compare how London has changed in the past 100 years, and the following photo of Strand Lane from the book took me to a very old place with a long story:
The text from Wonderful London with the above photo reads: “Strand Lane is thought to have once been the bed of a stream which ran down from Drury Lane to the Thames. A bridge called Strand Bridge crossed it, and the name was afterwards transferred to the landing stage at the bottom. The entrance to the Roman Bath is just to the right of the passage under the old watch house, and the property belongs to the parish of St. Mary’s. Just below the point where the camera stood for this photograph are some steps on the right leading up to Surrey Street”.
There is some truth and also a big error in the above 1920s text, which I will come to later in the post.
The same view today (although not exactly from the right place as there was a van and a car parked to the right and behind where I was standing):
The photographer for Wonderful London walked through the passage under the house, and took another photo looking down Strand Lane:
So I did the same:
The Wonderful London text for the second photo reads: “A low entry opposite the church of St. Mary-le-Strand leads to this quant passage. In former times Strand Lane led down to Strand Bridge, a landing place for boats much used by the inmates of Strand Inn, which lay just to the west of the lane. In ‘The Spectator’ it is recorded that Addison landed with a ten sail of apricot boats at Strand bridge for somebody’s stall in Covent Garden. There used to be some tenements in the Lane called Golden Buildings, but at present the backs of high houses on the east and a brick wall on the west are all that keep it as a lane.”
The description of the lane in the last sentence of the above 1920s text can equally apply to much of the lane today, but where is Strand Lane?
I have marked the location of Strand Lane within the red oval in the following map (© OpenStreetMap contributors):
The entrance to Strand Lane is from the south, along Temple Place. The Strand Campus of King’s College London occupies the large area of land to the west, and also the buildings along the eastern side of the lane, so today, Strand Lane seems to be fully within the campus of King’s College London.
Today, the lane comes to a dead end at the north. The Wonderful London description states that entry to the lane from the north was through a “low entry opposite the church of St. Mary-le-Strand leads to this quant passage“, however this has been closed off for the last fifty years due to the expansion of the college buildings.
Rocque’s map of 1746 shows that Strand Lane was to be found in the mid 18th century, and also shows how the lane ran directly to the Strand, just opposite the eastern end of St. Mary-le-Strand. Strand Lane can be seen running down from the Strand, in the centre of the following extract from Rocque’s map:
In the above map, you can see that Strand Lane runs down to a set of stairs into the river which went by the name of Strand Bridge.
In an 18th century reproduction of an earlier map, we can see Strand Lane, with the name of Strand Bridge Lane on the left edge of the map, when it was along the western border of the old Arundel House, one of the large houses and grounds that once lined the area between the Strand and the river:
Image: © The Trustees of the British Museum. Shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence.
The above map shows 4 small boats at the end of Strand Bridge Lane, illustrating that this was a place where you could take a boat along the river for a fee.
The use of the word “Bridge”, either in the name of the lane, or for the landing place at the end of the lane can best be described by taking the following extract from “London Past and Present” by Henry B. Wheatley (1891) :
“Strand Lane, in the Strand, east of Somerset House, and opposite the east end of St. Mary’s Church, was originally the channel of the rivulet which crossed the great thoroughfare under Strand Bridge. It must be remembered that the Strand at this part has been raised fully 20 feet above the ancient level. The lane led to the landing place, at one time known as Strand Bridge; but this was destroyed in forming the Thames Embankment and the lane is no longer a thoroughfare.”
“London Past and Present” also includes a passage from the 1709 publication “History of the Quakers” to substantiate a claim that there were once 311 open channels of water crossing the roadway between Westminster Hall and the Royal Exchange:
“The 18th December 1656, J. Naylor suffered part; and after having stood full two hours with his head in the Pillory, was stripped and whipped at a cart’s tail, from Palace Yard to the Old Exchange, and received three hundred and ten stripes; and the executioner would have given him one more (as he confessed to the Sheriff), ‘there being three hundred and eleven kennels’, but his foot slipping, the stroke fell upon his own hand, which hurt him much.”
“Kennels” were streams of water that ran either along the middle or along the edges of a street. One place where Kennels can still be found is Wells in Somerset, where there are streams flowing in channels along the sides of the streets:
Whether there were 311 streams or channels of water leading down to the river, crossing the road between Westminster and the Royal Exchange in the heart of the City is impossible to confirm and it does seem like a very large number, however there must have been a significant amount of small streams, and Strand Lane appears to be the route of one of these old streams. A reminder of how much we have changed the land surface of the city over the centuries, with so many of the original natural features erased or buried.
The plan of Arundel House shows the street as Strand Bridge Street, and perhaps the stream of water also acted as the western border of the plot of land on which Arundel House was built.
This is the entrance to Strand Lane from Temple Place. the buildings of King’s College London line the two sides of the land, and there is an enclosed overhead walking route between the two sides:
Temple Place, and the Embankment which was behind me when I took the above photo, were built during the late 19th century, so originally, the Thames came up to the roadway in front of me, and this was where the stairs at the end of Strand Lane could be found.
I use old newspapers for research into the places I write about. You need to be careful about journalistic spin, and as ever, newspapers always focus on the bad aspects of life, however they do give a good impression of day to day life in a city such as London.
We also tend to romanticise the London of the past, however if you did not have money, London was often a dark and brutal place for the poor, and particularly for girls and women, and whilst researching Strand Lane, I came across one of the most appalling and sad stories that I have read. This was reported across several newspapers on the 16th of June, 1786:
“Saturday morning the body of a fine young woman was taken out of the Thames at the end of Strand Lane, where she had drowned herself the preceding night. She appeared to be about eighteen years of age, and was known to have been turned out of doors the day before, by one of those inhuman monsters, in the shape of women, who keep brothels in the neighbourhood of Drury Lane.
The poor young victim had been brought from her parents at the age of eleven years, by the mistress of the Bagnio, from which she was dismissed when her face grew common, and the charms of extreme youth and novelty were no longer a temptation to debauched constitutions, and debilitated age. Thus thrown upon the town, penniless, and heart-broken, she put an end to her existence. the body was taken to a house in Strand Lane.”
The article states “charms of extreme youth and novelty” when she should have been described as a child, and although from the article some of her history was known, the article does not even give her the dignity of a name.
One cannot begin to imagine how much she must have suffered by the time she ended her life at the end of Strand Lane, in the Thames at what is now Temple Place and the Embankment.
Looking up Strand Lane today, the white house from the Wonderful London photo towards the end of the lane, buildings of King’s College on either side, a mix of very different architecture, and overhead crossings:
View to the west of Strand Lane, with a large, brick building with what looks like an apse, the curved section at the end of the building, almost over hanging the lane:
There is an unusual feature on the very top of the building in the above photo, a dome to house an astronomical telescope:
I wonder how much of the night sky can be seen given the level of light pollution in central London?
Approaching the end of Strand Lane, the van, and a car behind it, was the reason that I could not get into the right position to take an identical photo to that in Wonderful London. Whilst I was there, the lane seemed to be used for deliveries to and from King’s College buildings:
To the right of the van in the above photo, you can see some white tiling on the wall. This is the entrance to Surrey Steps:
Surrey Steps connect Surrey Street with Strand Lane:
One of the buildings that runs between Surrey Street and Strand Lane forms an arch over Surrey Steps. The end is gated so there is no public access from Surrey Street through to Strand Lane:
Surrey Steps is shown, but not named, in Rocque’s 1746 map, and I have highlighted them within the orange oval in the following extract from the map (note that where the steps meet Strand Lane, there appears to be some shading which would be the steps leading down to the lane):
I have also highlighted another feature in the above map, one that cannot be found today having been built over by Kings College buildings. This was Naked Boy Court, and the court featured in the earliest newspaper reference I could find to Strand Lane, from the 9th of January, 1733:
“On Friday Night the House of Mrs. Smith, a noted Midwife in Naked-Boy-Court, near Strand-lane, was broke open and robbed of 19 Guineas, 24 Broad Pieces, and several suites of Wearing Apparel.”
There were a number of Naked Boy Courts and Alleys in 18th century London, and the name seems to have come from a sign of a “youthful Bacchus astride a barrel”.
Walking into Surrey Street and this is the opposite end of Surrey Steps and shows that they are closed and gated:
There is also a sign on the wall at top left stating: “The National Trust Roman Bath, Down Steps Turn Right”.
Not only are the directions impossible to follow, but if you did get through the gate and down the steps, you would not find a Roman Bath, but the remains of a cistern dating from 1612 and built to feed a fountain in the gardens of Somerset House.
Just to show that you cannot always believe what you read, even in old books that for the most part are authoritative and accurate, in the book “London Past and Present” which I have quoted earlier in the post, Henry B. Wheatley states that “on the east side of this lane is a genuine, ancient Roman bath which is well worth inspection”.
Wonderful London also mentioned the Roman bath in the description to the photo.
In researching my blog posts, I always try to use multiple sources, books, maps, academic journals etc. to ensure they are as accurate as possible.
The Roman Baths / 17th century cistern are inside the building shown in the following photo, within Strand Lane. They are owned by the National Trust, but to gain access you need to contact Westminster Council at least a week in advance.
At the northern end of Strand Lane, there is no further access. This is where the old lane turned to the left / west in the 1746 map, and the turn is still here, but abruptly ends at a metal gate and the King’s College buildings that were built over the rest of where Strand Lane ran up to the Strand:
The northern end of Strand Lane was blocked up in 1971, using an order under section 153 of the Town and Country Planning Act, 1962 entitled ‘The Stopping up of Highways (City of Westminster), No. 3 Order 1971, authorising the stopping up of a length of Strand Lane.”
Looking back down Strand Lane with the brick building and apse on the right:
The building on the right appears from a plan of the college to be the King’s Building, and this link appears to have a photo of a large ornate room at the header of the page, which includes an apse at the far end, so perhaps this is the interior of the building with the apse almost hanging over Strand Lane.
Another view of the building:
Looking up at how the apse is supported:
Another delivery van enters Strand Lane:
Walking up to the Strand, and there is no sign of where Strand Lane once entered the Strand. From aligning maps, it seems to have been in the section of the building between the first and second pillars from the right, in the bay to the left of the “Welcome to King’s” sign:
At the far end of the King’s College building is the old Strand / Aldwych Underground Station, and on the side is green plaque:
Telling that William Lilly, Master Astrologer lived in a house on the site:
William Lilly was born in the county of Leicester, and the Leicester Chronicle on the 25th of October 1930 provides a summary of his life under the perfect local paper headline of “Diseworth Man’s Lucky Prophecies”:
“Leicestershire has given birth to some famous men. One of these, undoubtedly, is William Lilly, who was the first man in England to produce a prophetic almanac. He was born in Diseworth in 1602 and went to Ashby Grammar School. At the age of eighteen he journeyed to London and entered ‘service’.
He was fortunate to find in the City, a prosperous Leicestershire man who wanted a servant. Lilly was engaged to do odd jobs, but as his master was illiterate, and found the Diseworth youth was good at figures he employed him to keep his accounts.
It seems to have been the policy of William Lilly, all his life, to look specially after William Lilly. He so wormed his way into his master’s favour that he was awarded a legacy of £20 a year when the old man died in 1627. That was not enough for him, so he wooed the young widow and persuaded her to marry him. Six years later she died, leaving him property worth £1,000.
That gave him a start. he was now a man of leisure, and devoted a good deal of time to the study of astrology – then a very popular science (!), for most people believed in the influence of the stars on public and private lives. At the age of 42 he brought out his almanac, signing himself Meilinus Anglicus, junr.”
William Lilly:
Image: © The Trustees of the British Museum. Shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence.
The article continues:
“His almanac succeeded so well, and served him as so good an advertisement, that he set up a sort of astrologer’s business, being prepared to read the future for all who were willing to pay him. It seems extraordinary to us of the twentieth century that the most distinguished people of Lilly’s time used to patronise him, anxious to hear what the stars had to say about coming events.
Cromwell himself is said to have consulted the Diseworth astrologer. In 1648, when the Roundheads were besieging Colchester, and were not getting on very well, Lilly was sent for. He prophesied an early surrender, and the parliamentary troops were so encouraged that they forced the city to fulfil the prophecy.
But while Lilly was taking money from the Parliamentarians he was also feathering his nest from Royalist sources. He was consulted as to how King Charles might escape from his captors, and actually prepared a scheme for enabling the unfortunate monarch to get free. It failed because Charles had not the courage to carry it through to the end.
When the Stuarts were restored, Lilly’s fame began to decline, but he had several strokes of luck in his almanac. One of the prophecies, for instance, was taken to have been a clear indication that he knew the Great Fire of London was to happen; another helped him to acquire the favour of the king of Sweden, who sent him a gold chain worth £50.
In his old age Lilly found it wise to retire and keep out of the public eye. He lived to pass his eightieth birthday. He was a shrewd old man, if often unscrupulous and once his shrewdness saved him. He had prophesized in his almanac for 1653 that the Parliament would not last long, and that the Commonwealth would soon come to an end. He was summonsed to appear before a Governmental committee to account for his publication, but, before he attended, he got his printers to let him have some copies from which the objectionable prophecies were omitted. He presented them and protested that the other copies were spurious, issued by his enemies – and thus saved his skin.”
William Lilly and one of his annual almanacs:
Image: © The Trustees of the British Museum. Shared under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence.
William Lilly, an example of one of the problems of walking around London, there is always so much to find in any small area, as Lilly lived just to the north east of Strand Lane.
Strand Lane is a strange place. There are gates up against the wall at the entrance from Temple Place. I cannot remember if I have ever seen them closed. It is also not clear whether Strand Lane is really public space, or it is part of the King’s College campus, as buildings of the college line both sides of the lane.
The entry into Surrey Steps from Surrey Street is closed and locked, implying that this entrance to the lane is not public space.
In all the time I was looking around, and photographing the lane, there was no challenge, however the only other people in the lane were clearly those who had business with King’s College, and it is a dead end, so there is no destination to be reached by walking along the lane.
It is though, a fascinating place. Possibly the route of a very old “kennel” or stream that ran from north of the Strand, under Strand Bridge, down to the river. It was cut off from the Thames in the late 19th century when the Embankment was built, but for long was a landing place, a boundary between the river and land, and was once also the western boundary to Arundel House.
It was also the site of the tragic suicide of an eighteen year old girl, who must have suffered much in her short life in eighteenth century London.
Hi, we have kennels running through the old market town of Helston taking water from the leats above the town down to the River Cober, they are made from Cornish Granite and are a hazard to holiday makers who don’t watch what they are doing!
Absolutely fascinating! Thank you once again for your blogs and photos especially!
Strand Lane is owned by Westminster CC as are Surrey Steps.
https://www.westminster.gov.uk/road-search-results/Strand%20Lane
https://www.westminster.gov.uk/road-search-results/Surrey%20Steps
The steps have not always been gated off-I took a photo of them in 2016 and I remember them being usually open around that time. Over the past two years at least, however, they have always been locked.
Must walk these features again soon.
Lucky drivers have found a parking space with no yellow lines.
The projecting apse is that of KCL chapel, no?
Even by your high standards, an outstanding post. Sixty years ago, I worked in a laboratory belonging to Charing Cross Hospital in one of the courts further down The Strand. Fond memories of the area.
Dickens has David Copperfield living in Buckingham Street, which is off the Strand near Charing Cross. In Chapter 35 we read “There was an old Roman bath in those days at the bottom of one of the streets out of the Strand—it may be there still—in which I have had many a cold plunge. Dressing myself as quietly as I could, and leaving Peggotty to look after my aunt, I tumbled head foremost into it, and then went for a walk to Hampstead.” Chapter 36 begins with David taking “another dive into the Roman bath”. “Dive” suggests that it was quite deep. In the 1970s I worked in that area, in Buckingham Street in fact, and went once during my lunch hour to look at the so-called bath. I have only a hazy memory of what I saw – an enclosed place with railings, I think, but I can’t remember if there was any water there. I have always assumed that Dickens knew about the bath because he himself went there to swim, but I have no evidence for that
Marvellous stuff as ever, thanks. Without wanting to get too morbid, the ‘suicide’ of a homeless teenage girl of no further use to a ruthless brothel-keeper nearby is quite likely not to have been suicide at all. It happens to this day.
That was fascinating David, a really intriguing post. Knowing your interests I presume you established whether or not there were stairs onto the Thames at this location?
Very interesting. Thank you. Yes it would be interesting to know whether there were/are steps down to the Thames near here?
There is also a “kennel” running alongside Trumpington Street in Cambridge.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobson%27s_Conduit
Another great post. Yes, as mentioned above in the comments, the projecting apse is the King’s College London Chapel – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapel_of_King%27s_College_London
My father who was a student at KCL in the 70s told me that the (then) new building which was put up next to Somerset House saw the demolition of the last timber framed buildings on the Strand – not sure exactly how true that is but would be interesting to learn what was there beforehand. He also mentioned that the construction of that building damaged the waterworks to the ‘Roman’ bath/cistern, which have never been the same since.
Helston in Cornwall has a number of kennel water-ways as well.
King’s College chapel has an interesting history itself since the college was founded in direct opposition to the “godless establishment in Gower Street” (University College), which had been created a year or two earlier to offer a university education to dissenters, Roman Catholics, Jews, atheists and any others excluded from obtaining degrees at Oxford and Cambridge which required membership of the Established Church. Wikipedia has an interesting article on the founding of King’s which goes into the subject in depth. It’s hard in our secular times to imagine the degree of antagonism to a secular institution like UCLA which did not demand religious conformity as a condition of entry.
I recall visiting the “Roman Bath” whilst living in London, this was approx in 1989. Following directions, I walked through the passage from Surrey Street unencumbered, turned right, and I believe, descended some steps from the Lane into an open “room” beneath the building. There was a push button to activate a light (which was timed to go out in moments) which allowed you to view the bath, with its trickling of water. Bath or 17-th century cistern, it was still fascinating to view in complete solitude, as this was well off the beaten path; one HAD to be looking for this in order to find it.
The Roman baths are owned by the National Trust and managed by Westminster City Council.
Details here:
https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/visit/london/visiting-the-strand-lane-roman-baths?awc=3795_1726418052_13c3a75f33ddd28806125cb0c3d47739&campid=Affiliates_Central_Mem_AWIN_Standard&aff=271445
Thank you for posting about Strand Lane and finding and sharing that sad record of a young 18thC woman’s fate.
I discovered Strand Lane myself on a wander about twenty years ago, and at that time Surrey Steps wasn’t gated off at the Surrey Street entrance. If you look on Google Street View you can see that it is recorded as open between 2014 and 2017: https://www.google.com/maps/@51.5116838,-0.1153057,3a,75y,269.12h,75.02t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1slw4g77_kwTguOSnSSJ6l8A!2e0!5s20160701T000000!7i13312!8i6656?authuser=0&entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI0MDkxMS4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D
Back in 2003/4 it was definitely open, but the bottom access to Temple Place was blocked off by building works.
I felt then, as I’m sure you do now, that the Lane’s truncation at the northern end was a very unwelcome and sad 20thC intervention, and let’s face it Kings College are not known for their concern for the protection of surrounding heritage townscape, having tried to obtain permission to demolish a whole block on the Strand only relatively recently.
It would be interesting if you could find out about the rights of way into Surrey Steps. I can imagine that the owners may have had issues with anti-social behaviour, but loss of public access to ancient rights of way is never good news.
The watch house over the Lane is another fascinating survival.
Fun read, thank you. I wonder if there is any link between the white dome that you say would house a telescope and Lilly’s work?
Fantastic read after a hard day’s work, but now relaxing in the pub witha decent pint. Thank you for bringing a historic place alive I have walked past but never knew existed, but now look forward to exploring.
So much History and research you put in.I just love it.
Great read usually on a Sunday morning
Thank you so much.
Very interested to discover Strand Lane. I was a student at King’s in the early 1989s and knew nothing of it.
I’ve just uncovered the birth certificate of a family member who was born in 1924 at 162a Birch’s hotel Strand. I’d managed to deduce that this was likely a building that was incorporated into the expanded King’s buildings. I’ve now worked out that the hotel was run by a James A Birch and, along with Lockhart’s cocoa rooms at the same address, was most likely on the corner of/ part of Strand Lane.