Gresham Street

Gresham Street /ɡrɛʃəm/ in the City of London is named after the English merchant and financier Thomas Gresham.

Gresham Street
Gresham Street
At the junction of Gresham Street and Milk Street
Length0.3 mi (0.48 km)
LocationLondon, United Kingdom
Postal codeEC2
Nearest train stationLondon Underground St Paul's
London Underground Docklands Light Railway Bank
Coordinates51°30′55″N 00°05′35″W / 51.51528°N 0.09306°W / 51.51528; -0.09306
East endLothbury/Moorgate
West endSt. Martin's Le Grand
Construction
InaugurationBy 1896

It runs from the junction of Lothbury, Old Jewry and Coleman Street at its eastern end, to St. Martin's Le Grand in the west. Gresham Street was created in 1845 by widening and amalgamating Cateaton Street, Maiden Lane, St. Anne's Lane and Lad Lane.

The nearest London Underground stations are St Paul's, which can be reached via St. Martin's Le Grand to the south from its western end, and Bank, via Lothbury and Princes Street, a short distance to the south from its eastern end.

Overview

A famous coaching inn, The Swan With Two Necks, once stood on the former Lad Lane, at the junction of Gresham Street with Milk Street – one of the historic side-streets which leads off to the south towards Cheapside. Other ancient side-roads leading towards Cheapside are Foster Lane, Gutter Lane, Ironmonger Lane, and Old Jewry. Leading north off Gresham Street are Noble Street, Staining Lane, Aldermanbury, Basinghall Street and Coleman Street. Wood Street, home to the City of London Police headquarters, crosses Gresham Street and leads both north and south.

There is a memorial garden on the site of St. Mary Aldermanbury, a Christopher Wren church, that, following damage in the Blitz, was dismantled and rebuilt in Fulton, Missouri. Near the Guildhall—perhaps Gresham Street's most notable site—is the church of St. Lawrence Jewry, also by Wren.

Gresham Street is home to the Lloyds Banking Group's headquarters and also to Investec, Alliance Trust and Rensburg Sheppards.

It formed part of the marathon course of the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.

See also

References

Tags:

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Kevin De BruyneWolfgang Amadeus MozartQueen VictoriaCatRonald ReaganKirsten DunstNet neutralityKaya ScodelarioVirat KohliBruno FernandesJohn Wayne GacyRedditPep GuardiolaYoung SheldonSexual intercourseNaughty AmericaJean-Philippe MatetaJennifer LopezSoviet UnionLinkedInArtificial intelligenceMike TysonRobin WilliamsGAZ SobolTurkeyRyan GarciaRichard Armitage (actor)George VSam PitrodaRonan FarrowAparna DasKrushna AbhishekJames VI and IKorean WarSkibidi ToiletTerry HillJeffrey DahmerInna Lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'unSnapchatTLC (group)Russo-Ukrainian WarArti SinghRonnie O'SullivanChessThe Amazing Race 3628 Weeks LaterJake Paul vs. Mike TysonJohn CenaWrestleMania XLGitHubAmerican Civil WarRoad House (1989 film)BlackRockDevin HaneyOperation SandblastKannauj Lok Sabha constituencyIndonesia national under-23 football teamRyan GoslingList of prime ministers of IndiaJames ClavellBridgertonBlack holeUnited StatesPlanet of the ApesFallout 76Winston ChurchillGeorge VIKingdom of the Planet of the ApesChanning TatumShōgun (1980 miniseries)List of presidents of the United StatesStormy DanielsSolomon IslandsBritish Post Office scandalAndy (goose)GmailRajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium🡆 More