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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Beer Lane

Beer Lane (originally Bear Lane or Beare Lane) was a short street of the City of London from at least 1570 to 1910. It ran from almost the east end of Great Tower Street (latterly № 37), from opposite Seething Lane, to 53 Lower Thames Street, opposite the east warehouse block of Custom House. John Stow (born 1525) wrote "At the east end of Tower Street, on the south side, have ye Beare Lane, wherein are many fair houses, and runneth down to Thames Street."

Opposite its lower end, on the Tideway's city bank, was Bear Quay, later Great Bear Quay and Little Bear Quay, principally used for the landing and shipment of corn. Edward Hatton, in his A New View of London (1708) wrote "Here is a very great market for wheat and other sorts of grain, brought hither from the neighbouring counties".

In the early twentieth century, the lane hosted the office-warehouse of H.C. König & Co. from where they distributed their Westphalian Gin.

See also

References and footnotes

  1. ^ City of London and its Environs, sheet 36, Ordnance Survey, 1869-1880
  2. ^ Wheatley, Henry B. (1891). London past and present: Its history, associations, and traditions. Vol. I. London: John Murray. Cambridge University Press reprint, 2011. p. 139. ISBN 9781108028066.
  3. ^ Lockie, John. (1810). Lockie's Topography of London. London: Couchman.
  4. ^ Stow, p.51 quoted in Wheatley, 1891, p. 139.
  5. ^ Hatton, Edward. (1708) A New View of London. John Nicholson. Volume II, p. 784. Quoted in Wheatley, 1891, p. 139.
  6. ^ Advertising in the Royal Colonial Institute Year Book 1914 Royal Colonial Institute, London, 1914, p. v.
  1. ^ the pronunciation is that for the English word the as use of "th" for the ð sound (phoneme) used to be an alternative orthography to ye

51°30′33.08″N 0°4′46.63″W / 51.5091889°N 0.0796194°W / 51.5091889; -0.0796194