Cromer Street is a road in St Pancras, London in central London, England. It starts in the west at Judd Street, then goes east, ending at Gray's Inn Road. It gave access from Gray's Inn Road to Greenland Place and a bowling green.

Lucas Arms at the East end junction with Gray's Inn Road

History edit

 
Sign showing the former borough

Cromer Street was formerly called Lucas Street and was renamed in 1818. In the earlier 1840s, it was described as being occupied by a class of 'more or less poor' 'small tradesmen and artisan lodgers' in densely crowded lodgings.[1] On it is Church of the Holy Cross, which was built by Joseph Peacock and dedicated in 1888.

105 houses were built in the street in the early 19th century, but it has largely been rebuilt and consists of over 1,000 council and housing properties, mostly pre-1919 railway tenements of fine architectural qualities on the north side, and on the south a "striking sequence of nine 6-storey slabs of flats of 1949–1951 by Hening & Chitty... They were singled out by Pevsner in 1952 as some of the first good post-war flats" The area has suffered deprivation and crime and[2] in 1996, was the subject of a £46 million regeneration project.[3] Nowadays there is a very large Bangladeshi Muslim population living in the area.[4]

Transport edit

The nearest tube stations are King's Cross St Pancras, Russell Square, and Euston.

Pubs edit

 
The Boot

The street contains two pubs: The Lucas Arms at the east end, on the junction with Gray's Inn Road, and The Boot at the west end, near the junction with Judd Street. The Boot Tavern was the headquarters of the Gordon rioters and later was used as a location of some of the action in Charles Dickens' book, Barnaby Rudge; it was rebuilt in 1801. Kenneth Williams filmed a sequence in 'The Boot' for the 1980s TV programme, 'Comic Roots', since it was there that his parents and their friends met; when he was a child, he lived at No. 14 Cromer House.[5] The Lucas Arms has been used for meetings of political organisations.[6][7]

References edit

  • Walter H. Godfrey and W. McB. Marcham, ed. (1952). Survey of London. Vol. 24. London: Publisher: London County Council. pp. 94–95. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  1. ^ Thomas Wakley, ed. (1843). On the excess of diseases in large towns, and its causes. Vol. 2. London: J. Onwhyn. p. 775. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  2. ^ The Buildings of England. London 4:North. Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner. Yale University Press 2002
  3. ^ Colquhoun, Ian (2003). Design out crime:creating safe and sustainable." communities. London: Architectural Press. p. 284. ISBN 978-0-7506-5492-0. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  4. ^ Muslims in Britain
  5. ^ Alexander John Philip, William Laurence Gadd, ed. (1970). A Dickens Dictionary (2nd ed.). Ayer Publishing. p. 330. ISBN 978-0-8337-2735-0. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  6. ^ Fionnbarra Ó Dochartaigh (1994). Ulster's White Negroes. p. 19. ISBN 9781873176672.
  7. ^ Muriel Seltman. What's Left? What's Right?: A Political Journey. p. 64. ISBN 9781434958211.

51°31′40″N 0°07′19″W / 51.52778°N 0.12194°W / 51.52778; -0.12194