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Hoxton

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Hoxton
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Location
OS grid reference:TQ335835
Latitude: 51.534557°
Longitude: -0.074279°
Administration
London borough: Hackney
County level: Greater London
Region: London
Constituent country:England
Sovereign state:United Kingdom
Other
Ceremonial county: Greater London
Historic county: Middlesex
Services
Police force: Metropolitan Police
Fire brigade: London Fire Brigade
Ambulance service: London Ambulance
Post office and telephone
Post town: LONDON
Postal district: N1
Dialling code:020
Politics
UK Parliament: Hackney South and Shoreditch
London Assembly: North East
European Parliament: London
London | List of places in London

Hoxton (origin Hoc's farm) is an area in the London Borough of Hackney, immediately north of the financial district of the City of London. The area of Hoxton is bordered by Old Street to the south, City Road to the west, Regents Canal on the north side and Kingsland Road on the east.

Contents

[edit] Historical Hoxton

'Hogesdon' is first recorded in the Domesday Book. Little is recorded of the origins of the settlement, though there was Roman activity around Ermine Street, which ran to the east of the area from the 1st century. In medieval times, Hoxton formed a rural part of Shoreditch parish. It achieved independent ecclesiatical status in 1826 with the founding of its own parish church dedicated to St John the Baptist - though civil jurisdiction was still invested in the Shoreditch vestry.

By Tudor times, many moated manor houses existed to provide ambassadors and courtiers country air close to the city. This included many Catholics, attracted by the house of the Portuguese ambassador<ref>The ambassador was possibly Anthony de Castillo, who was linked to the Tudor spymaster Francis Walsingham through the Portuguese double agent, Dr Hector Nunes. "Toleration" of the chapel may have been linked to this flow of intelligence. in Turmoil: The Abject Life of a Portuguese Alien in Elizabethan England, by Charles Meyers accessed: 23 Nov 2006</ref>, who, in his private chapel<ref>The Embassy Chapel Question, 1625-1660, William Raleigh Trimble, Journal of Modern History, Vol. 18, No. 2 (Jun., 1946), pp. 97-107</ref>, celebrated the masses forbidden in a Protestant country<ref>On 24th October 1568, the Portuguese Ambassador's chapel was searched for recusants by Raffe Typpinge of Hoxton. Raffe, and the Tipping family would subsequently feature in the arrest and death of Christopher Marlowe. (see Seaton, "Marlowe, Poley and the Tippings" in Review of English Studies [1929] os-V, p.273-287)</ref>. One such resident was, Sir Thomas Tresham, who was imprisoned here, by Elizabeth I of England for harbouring Catholic priests. The open fields to the north and west were used for archery practice; and on September 22nd, 1598 the playwright Ben Jonson fought a fatal duel in Hoxton Fields, killing actor Gabriel Spencer. He was able to prove his literacy, thereby claiming benefit of clergy to escape a hanging.

Hoxton, in Tudor times, contained public gardens that were a popular resort from the crowded city streets on holidays, and are reputed to have gained their name of Pimlico from the publican, Ben Pimlico<ref>British History on-line, disagrees on this point, and considers the derivation lost in the past; it is however probable that it refers to an individual.</ref>, and his particular brew.
Have at thee, then, my merrie boyes, and beg for old Ben Pimlico’s nut-brown ale.<ref><cite>Newes from Hogsdon (1598) in E. Cobham Brewer 1810–1897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898</ref>.
The gardens appear to have been situated near Hoxton Street, known at that time, as Pimlico Path. The modern area of Pimlico derives its name from its former use in Hoxton.

On the October 26th, 1605 Hoxton achieved notoriety, when a letter arrived at the home of local resident William Parker, Lord Monteagle warning him not to attend the Parliament summoned by James I to convene on November 5th, because ... yet I say they shall receive a terrible blow, the Parliament, and yet they shall not see who hurts them.. The letter may have been sent by his brother-in-law Francis Tresham, or he may have written it himself, to curry favour. The letter was read aloud at supper, in front of the company of prominent catholics, and then he brought it personally to Robert Cecil at Whitehall. While the conspirators were alerted, by the public reading, to the existence of the letter they persevered with their plot as their gunpowder remained undiscovered. William Parker accompanied Thomas Howard, the Lord Chamberlain, in his visit to the undercroft of parliament, where Guy Fawkes was found in the early hours of November 5th. Most of the conspirators fled on the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot, but Francis Tresham was arrested a few days later at his house in Hoxton. A commemorative plaque is attached to modern flats on the site of Parker's house in Hoxton Street.

By the end of the 17th century the estates were being broken up, and many of the existing large houses used as mad houses, with almshouses being built on the land between by City benefactors and guilds. Hoxton House, for instance, became a private asylum in 1695. It was owned by the Miles family, and expanded rapidly into the surrounding streets. Here 'gentle and middle class' people took their exercise in the extensive grounds between Pitfield St and Kingsland Rd. The only remains are by Hackney Community College, where a part of the house was incorporated into the school that replaced it in 1921. Askes almshouses were founded on Pitfield Street in 1689 from an endowment from Robert Aske for 20 poor Haberdashers and a school for 20 children of freemen.

Hoxton Market, founded in 1687, was a once thriving market that lost its status to neighbouring markets such as Bethnal Green and Dalston. Student flats have now been built on much of the site. A small eponymous square remains.

In the Victorian era the railways made travelling to distant suburbs easier, and this combined with infill building and industrialisation to drive away the wealthier classes, leaving Hoxton a concentration of the poor with many slums.

In Hoxton Street, a plaque marks the location of the Britannia music hall. This evolved from former tea gardens, a tavern and a saloon into a 3000 seat theatre, designed by Finch Hill. Together with the nearby Pollack's Toy Museum, it was destroyed in World War II bombing. Hoxton Hall, also in Hoxton Street, survives as a community centre, began life in 1863 as a 'saloon style' music hall. It remains, largely in its original form, as for many years it was used as Quaker meeting house. There was also the 1870 Varieties Music Hall (by C.J.Phipps) in nearby Pitfield Street, this became a cinema in 1910, closing in 1941 but appears to have been demolished for housing in the 1980s.

With a new found popularity, parts of Hoxton have been gentrified, this has inevitably aroused hostility among some local residents, who believe they are being priced out of the area. Much of Hoxton, however, remains deprived with council housing dominating the landscape.

[edit] 'ShoHo' or 'Hoxditch'

Hoxton and Shoreditch are often deliberately or unwittingly conflated though the portmanteau designation "ShoHo" (or "Hoxditch"). The two districts have an historical link, as part of the same manor, and in the 19th century both formed part of the Metropolitan Borough of Shoreditch. This was subsumed into the London Borough of Hackney in 1965, but old street signs bearing the name, still occur throughout the area.

Manufacturing developments, in the years after the war, meant that many of the small industries that characterised Hoxton moved out. By the early 1980's, these industrial lofts and buildings came to be occupied by young artists as inexpensive live/work spaces; while art happenings, raves and clubs occupied former office and retail space at the turn of the 1990s. The area became renowned for artists, and the things they enjoyed doing. During this time the pubs on Rivington Street were the nexus for the Young British Artist scene. Curtain Road Arts was founded and Joshua Compston established his Factual Nonsense gallery on Charlotte Road and organised art fetes on Hoxton Square. The digital film organisation, onedotzero has been based in the area for all of it's 10 year history.Their presence gradually drew other creative people into the area (especially magazines, design firms, and dot-coms).

By the end of the 20th century, Hoxton had become a vibrant arts and entertainment district boasting a large number of bars, nightclubs, restaurants, and art galleries. In this period, the new Hoxton residents could be identified by their obscurely fashionable (or "ironically" unfashionable) clothes and their hair (the so-called "Hoxton Fin", as exemplified by Fran Healy of Travis).

Hoxton (and Shoreditch) denizens have been satirised in the satirical magazine Shoreditch Twat, on the TVGoHome website, and in its sitcom incarnation Nathan Barley. In recent years, Shoreditch and Hoxton have been home to pop musicians Jarvis Cocker and Future Sound of London, fashion designer Alexander McQueen, and artists Gavin Turk and Jake and Dinos Chapman, along with actor and heartthrob Gael Garcia Bernal. The focal point in the area is Hoxton Square, a small park bordered mainly by industrial buildings.

As property developers moved in to cash in on the area's trendy image, prices rose steeply. In response, the local council formed a not-for-profit corporation, Shoreditch Our Way (ShOW), to buy local buildings and lease them out as community facilities and housing.

In the former Vestry of St Leonard Shoreditch Electric Light Station, just to the north of Hoxton Market, is based The Circus Space. Inside, the Generating Chamber and Combustion Chamber provide facilities for circus training and production. The building was constructed by the Vestry in 1895 to burn local rubbish, and generate electricity. This replaced an earlier coal-fired facility located in Shoreditch.

The extension of the East London Line (completion in 2010), will again provide local rail access, lost when the Broad Street approach closed to services.

[edit] Transport

[edit] Nearest places

[edit] Nearest tube stations


[edit] Individuals associated with Hoxton

  • Reggie & Ronnie Kray - East End gangsters born in Stene Street Hoxton (1933)
  • Marie Lloyd - Music hall star, was born Matilda Alice Victoria Wood here on February 12th, 1870. The eldest of nine children. She, and her sisters longed to go on the stage, and haunted the local Royal Eagle Tavern, Music hall, on City Road (where their father also worked, as a waiter). Seven of her siblings went onto professional stage careers, adopting the surname Lloyd, apart from Daisy, who had a successful career as Daisy Wood.
  • Jamie Oliver opened the original Fifteen restaurant in Hoxton in 2002
  • James Parkinson (physician and researcher on Parkinson's Disease, was a resident of Hoxton Square)
  • Mary Wollstonecraft (social reformer, writer, mother of Mary Shelley, born and lived early years here)


[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

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