CHAPTER XXIX.
HOLLOWAY.

"THE SEVEN SISTERS" IN 1830. (See Page 380.)
"Boreales visere terras."—Tibullus.
The Work of an Amiable Hermit—Copenhagen Fields—The New Cattle Market—Our Meat Supply—The "Brecknock Arms" Tavern—Duel
between Colonel Fawcett and Lieutenant Munro—The City Prison—The Camden Town Athenæum—The New Jerusalem Church—Holloway
Congregational Chapel—Seven Sisters' Road—Holloway Hall—The Old "Half Moon" and "Mother Red Cap" Taverns—St. Saviour's
Hospital and Refuge for Women and Children—St. John's Church—The "Archway" Tavern—Dangers of the Roads—Descendants of the
Poet Milton—The Lazar House—The Small-pox Hospital—Whittington's Stone—Whittington's Almshouses—Benefactions of Sir Richard
Whittington.
In a previous part of this work, whilst speaking
of the limits of the old Manor of Highbury, (fn. 1) we
touched slightly upon that district lying to the
west of the Hornsey and Holloway Roads, known
respectively as Upper and Lower Holloway; but
many other interesting details not mentioned on
that occasion still remain to be told.
Holloway is a hamlet which belonged originally
to the parish of Islington; and it received its name
from being situated in the "hollow way" or lowland valley between that place and Highgate. It
is said that the soil in this part being a stiff clay,
that part of the road from Highgate to Islington
which passes through Holloway was made with
gravel excavated on the top of Highgate Hill by an
amiable hermit, who had taken up his abode there.
"A two-handed charity," quaintly remarks old
Fuller, "providing water on the hill, where it was
wanting, and cleanness in the valley, which before,
especially in winter, was passed with great difficulty." It is stated in the Ambulator that the last
"hermit" of Highgate was one William Forte, who
lived in the reign of Henry VIII. But of this
hermit and his work we shall have more to say on
a future occasion.
A large portion of Holloway, lying between
the York Road and Caledonian Road, was formerly known as the Copenhagen Fields—once the
resort of Cockney lovers, Cockney sportsmen, and
Cockney agitators. Of the past history of this
place, including the noted Copenhagen House,
which stood here, we have already spoken in the
chapter above referred to; (fn. 2) but it remains to be
added that about the year 1852 much of the ground
hereabouts, to the extent of some seventy acres,
was taken by the Corporation of London, in accordance with the provisions of an Act of Parliament passed in the above year, as a site for the
new cattle-market, which was to supersede the
old market at Smithfield. The new market was
planned, and the various buildings connected with
it erected, from the designs of Mr. J. B. Bunning,
the architect to the City of London, at a cost of
nearly £500,000.
The question of the removal of the cattle-market
from its old quarters, almost in the heart of the
City, to a more strictly suburban locality had long
been under consideration; and its absolute removal
in the end became almost a matter of sheer necessity, not only on account of the inconvenience in
transacting business, but from the danger arising
through the driving of cattle along the crowded
streets of London. As we have mentioned in a
previous volume, (fn. 3) so far back as 1836 a cattlemarket was established at Islington, but its career
seems to have been but of brief duration. The
situation of this establishment was, perhaps, considered the best that could have been chosen for
its purpose, lying open, as it did, to most of the
great roads from the northern and eastern counties,
from which the chief supply of cattle and sheep to
the London market is derived, and communicating
conveniently, by means of the New or City Road,
with the greater part of the town, without driving
through the heart of it, than any other would have
done. As we have intimated, however, this market
does not seem to have met with the success which
was anticipated, and the old market was carried
on with unabated vigour in the crowded pens of
Smithfield Bars. Latterly, however, the nuisance
engendered by the dirt and crowd, and the rush
of horned cattle through the neighbouring streets,
had become so intolerable, that the matter was
taken in hand by the Corporation of London, and
after considerable opposition from persons with
"vested interests," the New Cattle Market was
laid out, as we have stated above, at Copenhagen
Fields, and it was opened by the Prince Consort
in person, in June, 1855.
As regards the site, it was thought by many at
the time that the market should have been placed
at a greater distance from the City; but it is, nevertheless, a great improvement upon old Smithfield.
In our account of Pentonville, in the volume above
referred to, we have given a few details of the
new cattle-market at Copenhagen Fields, but we
may be pardoned for giving a more detailed description here. It forms an irregular quadrangle,
and is all that could be desired in its architectural
and general design. All the plans for drainage, so
far as place is concerned, are said to be excellent;
the space for the various animals is ample; water,
&c., is conveniently at hand; and so good is
the opportunity for general inspection, that much
of the cruelty which was so justly a matter of
complaint when the cattle market was held in
Smithfield is avoided.
The open area of the market is partitioned off
into divisions for the reception of all sorts of live
stock, and is inclosed by metal railings, well worthy
of notice for their artistic merit; indeed, ornament
is not despised in the midst of all these very practical arrangements, for in those parts appropriated
to cattle, sheep, &c., each central rail is ornamented with characteristic casts of the heads of
oxen, sheep, pigs, &c., designed and modelled by
Bell, the sculptor. In the centre of the inclosure
is a lofty clock-tower, from which the bell gives
notice of the commencement and close of the
market; and around the base of this tower is a
sort of rotunda—a twelve-sided structure—in
which are the branch offices of several banks,
railway companies, salesmen, telegraph companies,
shops for the sale of chemicals, &c. This edifice
is commonly called the Bank Building. The clerk
of the market has also his office here, where, with
the aid of his assistants, he is busily engaged in
registering the receipts and delivery of animals.
On ascending to the belfrey, in the centre of the
enclosure, and looking down, the geometrical
arrangement of the pens and sheds presents a
curious and agreeable appearance, and it will be
at once seen that nearly all round the market
space has been reserved for extension—a necessary consideration, when it is borne in mind
that in half a century hence the population of the
metropolis, if it goes on increasing at the rate of
progress which it has shown since the formation
of the market, may perhaps be doubled. The
open space mentioned above will accommodate
about 7,000 cattle, 42,000 sheep, and a proportionate number of calves and pigs; and the
different pens and sheds, which run at right
angles, are lettered and numbered. The departments for calves and pigs are covered in
above by light, partially-glazed roofs, supported on
iron columns, which serve at the same time as
water-drains. At the four corners of the principal
area of the market are taverns of large size, with
stabling, &c., adjoining; and on the north side,
standing upon part of the vacant space belonging
to the market, is a neat red-brick building, ornamentally constructed, which serves as the Drovers'
Institute. On the south and west sides are extensive "lairs" for the reception of such live stock
as may not have been disposed of on marketdays, or which may have arrived too soon. There
are also store-houses for hay, corn, and other provender, and a small space for a dead-meat market.
On the east side a large space of ground has been
covered in with long ranges of slaughter-houses or
abattoirs, constructed on the principle so generally
exemplified in foreign cities. These buildings are
very spacious, thoroughly ventilated, and supplied
with water, machinery, and every other necessary
convenience. By the erection of these abattoirs,
the unpleasant practice of driving the cattle through
the crowded streets of the metropolis has in a
great measure been avoided; while the inconvenient and unsanitary practice of slaughtering
animals in back slums and alleys, and in the midst
of a large population, has now become almost a
thing of the past.
Close to the market are stations for the reception
of cattle from the lines of the Great Northern, the
London and North-Western, and other railways,
so that animals can be brought directly into the
market by railway from almost all parts of the
kingdom. This, indeed, is a great advantage upon
the old system of bringing cattle to the metropolitan market, for it must be remembered that
in former times it took five or six weeks to drive
oxen and sheep from the north of Scotland to
London, whereas they can now be brought from
the same distance at far less cost—taking their
condition, &c., into consideration—by train, in
about a couple of days. Indeed, since the time
when the market was first established here, there
have been great changes in respect of the supply
of animal food for the population of the metropolis. "Then," as we have already had occasion
to observe, "most of the beasts and sheep converted into meat for sale in the shops of London
butchers were brought to London alive, and then
slaughtered by the retailers. With the development
of our railway system, and the additions to the great
main lines by extensions which brought them into
the business parts of the metropolis, the dead-meat
traffic from the provinces exhibited year by year
a heavier tonnage." Most of the large meat salesmen of London are now represented in the shambles
at the Cattle Market, and a considerable quantity
of the cattle for metropolitan consumption is killed
here almost as soon as it arrives: some, it is true,
is still slaughtered in different parts of London,
whilst others have to take a long journey before
they become "food for the use of man."
Of late years, it is asserted, enormous strides
have been made in the improvement of our cattle.
The old big-boned stock has now been, in a great
measure, replaced by the smaller, more symmetrical,
but nevertheless greater meat-carrying, animal;
consequently, in a large number of beasts offered
now, the actual weight of meat is in reality much
in excess of what it would have been a few years
back; and not only that, but the quality is so
much better that waste is reduced to a minimum.
The year 1876 saw the introduction of a novel
feature in the cattle trade, and one which it behoves the home breeders to watch narrowly if
they do not wish to fall behind in the race. Consumers must have hailed with satisfaction the
opening up of a new source of supply. America
has now entered the field, and judging from the
success which has attended the initiation of the
scheme, she may be considered to have definitely
and permanently taken up a position to compete
with our graziers for the supply of live stock to
the British public. Healthy competition is to
be encouraged, as it must have the natural effect
of stimulating us to fresh exertions, and if the
large amount of success which has already attended
us is to be taken as a fair criterion of our powers,
possibly in the near future the general excellence of
our cattle will be so advanced as to greatly excel
all previous shows. Year by year cattle-rearing
is becoming more and more of a science. Greater
judgment is required in the selection of animals
for breeding purposes, and increased care is
necessary in their management. Well-bred and
well-fed stock is now so plentiful that a secondrate animal stands no chance in the market. To
expedite sales, good quality and condition must
be guaranteed. The Americans are to be praised
for the manner in which they placed so many
good beasts in our market, apparently but little
distressed with their long voyage. But this, perhaps, is a digression.
The market-days here are Mondays and Thursdays for cattle, sheep, and pigs, and Fridays for
horses, donkeys, goats, &c.; but the great market
of the year is that which is held a week or two
before Christmas, when the sale of fat stock for
consumption at the festive season takes place.
The number of beasts exhibited for sale at Old
Smithfield Market in 1844 was about 5,700; in
1854, the last year in which it was held there,
it had reached upwards of 6,100. In the first
Christmas market at Copenhagen Fields, the
number of beasts offered for sale was 7,000; in
1863, as many as 10,300 were shown, which was
almost double the number brought to market in
1868. Since the latter year the numbers have
ranged from 6,300 to 7,600.
At a short distance from the north-west corner
of the market, and standing at the corner of the
Camden and Brecknock Roads, is the well-known
tavern bearing the sign of the "Brecknock Arms,"
a sign which keeps in remembrance the second
title of the Marquis Camden. In former times
it vied with its near neighbour, the "White House,"
at Chalk Farm, as a rendezvous for the lovers of
athletic exercises, in the shape of single-stick and
wrestling matches, &c. The house stands on the
very borders of Camden Town and Holloway; it
is an attractive building, and at one time had some
pleasant tea-gardens attached to it. In the summer
of 1843, when it stood almost alone in the road,
the place acquired considerable notoriety from a
fatal duel which was fought there between Colonel
Fawcett and Lieutenant Munro, in which the
former was killed. The record of this duel possesses
a twofold interest, from the fact of its being probably the last—certainly the last fatal one—that
was ever fought in England, and also that the
principal actors in it were not only brother officers,
but also brothers-in-law—at all events, they had
married two sisters. The origin of the quarrel
was a hasty expression used by Colonel Fawcett
respecting some family differences, which led his
adversary, Lieutenant Munro, to send him a challenge. The duel came off early in the morning of
Saturday, July 1, in a field in Maiden Lane (now
Brecknock Road), adjoining the rifle-ground belonging to the "Brecknock." The colonel on
being brought, dangerously wounded, to this inn,
was refused admittance; so he was taken to the
"Camden Arms," where he died on the following
Monday. The coroner's jury on the inquest returned a verdict of wilful murder, not only against
Lieutenant Munro, but against the seconds also.
The latter, however, were acquitted, and Munro
evaded the hands of justice by seeking refuge
abroad; but four years afterwards he surrendered
to take his trial at the Old Bailey. He was found
guilty of wilful murder, and sentence of death was
recorded against him. He was strongly recommended to mercy, and his sentence was afterwards
commuted to twelve months' imprisonment.
At the top of Camden Road, at its junction with
Holloway, stands the City Prison, or House of
Correction for male and female prisoners sentenced
at the Central Criminal Court, the Mansion House,
or Guildhall Justice Rooms. It is also the Queen's
and Debtors' Prison for London and Middlesex.
This prison had its origin in the old Giltspur
Street Compter, of which we have already given
some particulars; (fn. 4) and on the demolition of the
Whitecross Street Prison a few years later, the
debtors confined there were removed hither. It
was built in 1850, on land originally purchased by
the Corporation as a cemetery, during the first
visitation of the cholera in 1832, and it covers about
ten acres. Its boundary walls are nearly twenty
feet in height, and erected as it is in the castellated
style, and standing on a conspicuous eminence, it
presents a rather imposing appearance. It has
some strongly fortified gateways, and is embattled
throughout the extent of its radiating wings, which
are six in number. The prisoners are employed in
various ways, and the discipline is a mixture of the
separate and associated systems. The architect of
the building was Mr. J. B. Bunning, and the cost
of its erection was about £105,000. It is fireproof throughout; it is ventilated by a shaft nearly
150 feet high, and is supplied with water from an
artesian well which is carried down into the chalk
upwards of 300 feet. On either side of the gatehouse are picturesque buildings of red brick with
stone dressings, which serve as residences for the
governor of the prison and the chaplain. The
gateway tower itself is an imposing structure; like
the main portion of the prison, it is embattled, and
reminds one of the entrance to some grand old
mediæval castle. Above the entrance gateway are
the dwelling-rooms of the chief warder. In the
rear of the gate-house is a spacious court-yard, on
the farther side of which is the Gothic arched doorway of the prison. This part of the edifice is
particularly grand and massive, having been built
after a model of the principal front of Warwick
Castle. On either side of the window above the
doorway large painted griffins appear to be doing
duty as sentinels, and over the door are some
bold machicolations. Stretching away to the right
and left of the entrance are lofty wings; the former
is used for female prisoners, and the latter for
debtors, or rather—since imprisonment for debt
has been abolished—for those persons who may be
committed for contempt of court, non-payment of
fines, &c. This wing was at first occupied by
juvenile offenders, and at times as many as eighty
or one hundred have been confined there at once;
but such has been the diminution in crime of late
years, owing to the establishment of reformatories
and industrial schools, that the number is now very
considerably diminished, rarely exceeding ten or
twelve at one time.
Passing through the doorway, the visitor enters
a spacious and lofty hall, or reception-room for
prisoners, whence a broad flight of steps leads to
a balcony at one end, and so on to a long corridor
extending back to that part of the prison containing the cells. On the left of the hall is a room
into which prisoners are first taken to be weighed,
to be duly and properly described in a large book
kept for that purpose, and to have their warrants
of commitment checked. Here, too, are kept
photographs of all the prisoners confined here, with
all the details of the crimes duly set down to their
account; these, combined with the entries in the
book above mentioned, would doubtless furnish
ample material for a biographical memoir of many
a well-known criminal. These records are kept
posted up, upon the "double-entry principle," in a
ledger and also in a day-book; all particulars concerning the various prisoners—such as their names,
ages, height, weight, colour of hair and eyes, and
any peculiarity or malformation of their limbs—are duly set down in writing, so that little or no
difficulty is experienced by those whose duty it is
to keep these accounts, in finding out whether any
criminal has been previously convicted, although
he may have assumed a different name from that by
which he (or she) was previously known. This
mode of keeping accounts of offenders against the
law was, in a great measure, brought to its present
state of simple perfection by Mr. Agar, the chief
warder of the prison, an official who, having risen
to that position after many years' experience in the
various details of prison-life, in the execution of his
duty, while enforcing strict discipline, has at the
same time endeavoured to blend the reformatory
and industrial principles laid down by his superior
officers, and to whom we are indebted for much of
the information here given while acting as our
cicerone. On either side of the corridor mentioned
above are the various offices for the governor and
the chief warder; also the doctor's room, the aldermen's committee-room, and the visitors' room.
This last-mentioned apartment is divided in the
centre by two partitions, the outer side of each
being further subdivided into a series of small
compartments. These compartments have an open
aperture, facing each other, about six inches by
twelve, and guarded by wire-work, through which
the conversation is carried on between the prisoner
and the visitor; in the intervening space between
the two partitions a warder is on duty during the
visiting time.
At the end of the corridor, a doorway leads at
once into the centre of the prison. From this
point the four principal wings radiate; they are
lettered A, B, C, and D respectively. That on
the left, which lies parallel with the "debtors'
wing" mentioned above, is set apart for prisoners
who have never before been convicted; in the
next are confined, as far as practicable, tradesmen,
mechanics, and persons who have hitherto filled
a respectable position in life; the third wing is
devoted to the reception of criminals who may
have been convicted for petty offences; and the
last, or D wing, serves as the receptacle for known
old offenders. These wings are three storeys in
height, and light iron galleries run round three
sides of each, from which the cells are reached.
For criminals there are 349 cells, 289 for males
and 60 for females; and for "debtors" there are
60 cells, and four day-rooms. Provisions are raised
to the different floors by lifts in the central hall.
Each cell is about twelve feet long by seven feet
wide, and is well lighted, warmed, and ventilated;
and each is provided with every necessary for the
convenience of its inmate. The chapel is a large
and convenient apartment above the offices; it is
so arranged that prisoners of each class, while they
can see and be seen by the chaplain, cannot see
one another; the male prisoners being arranged
on a deep gallery, in four groups, as above distinguished, whilst the females are placed in a sort
of transept on the north side of the communiontable, hid from the sight of their fellow-prisoners
by a high partition, but, at the same time, able
to see the clergyman, whose reading-desk is placed
in the centre of a gallery on the east side of the
chapel, the "debtors" having accommodation in
a similar way on the south side; in the eastern
gallery are seats for the governor, the chief warder,
and other officers.
At the ends of the four wings above mentioned
are the various work-rooms for mat-making, tailoring, shoemaking, and other trades, also the school,
infirmaries, treadwheel, and dark cells. The whole
of the water supply for the prison is pumped
from the well above mentioned by the aid of the
treadwheel. Brickmaking is largely carried on by
the prisoners in the grounds at the rear. There
are sufficient means for enforcing hard labour,
according to the numbers sentenced; and prisoners
are at all times under supervision. Prisoners are
allowed to participate in the profits of their labour
if they perform any over and above their task-work.
This system, it is affirmed, makes the prisoners
more industrious and attentive, prevents breaches of
discipline, and enables them to earn their living on
discharge. As we learn from the published report
of the Inspectors of Prisons, issued in 1876, the
total number of criminals admitted here during
the year 1874 was 1,572; the number discharged,
removed, or who had died during the year ending
at Michaelmas, 1875, was 1,339; the average
daily number of criminals in custody during the
same time was 264, twenty of whom were females.
The greatest number in the prison at any one time
during the year was 275 males and 35 females,
making a total of 310; and the number of recommittals during the year of criminals known to
have been previously imprisoned at any time, or in
any prison, was 329 males and 92 females.
That the prison is partially self-supporting will
be seen from the following details gleaned from
the above-mentioned report:— Under the heading,
"How prisoners have been employed during the
year, at productive and unproductive labour, and
the earnings of those engaged in each employment,"
we find that mat-making, which is done by contract, realised a sum of £1,225 4s. 8d.; oakumpicking, £111 5s.; brickmakers earned £442 19s.;
gardeners and piggery, £83 5s. 1d.; shoemaker
and tailors, £43 19s. 5d.; whilst smiths, whitewashers, carpenters, tinmen, bookbinders, &c., the
value of whose labour is estimated at two shillings
a day, produced a net profit of £52 7s. 3d. The
estimated value of work done for the prison during
the same period, by the prisoners, amounted in
the whole to £2,153 12s.

CLAUDE DUVAL'S HOUSE, IN 1825. (See Page 381.)
The hours of labour for the prisoners are from
half-past five in the morning till eight in the evening,
out of which time one hour is set aside for exercise,
one hour for service in the chapel, and two hours
for meals. The total ordinary expenditure of the
prison, including salaries to all officers, &c., for
the year ending 29th of September, 1875, amounted
to £10,464 5s. 7d.; the average annual cost per
prisoner, without allowing for earnings of labour,
is £35 14s. 3d.; the average annual net profit
on each prisoner's labour is £6 13s. 9d.; and the
average weekly cost of food per prisoner is 2s. 7½d.
The subordinate staff of officials in the prison consists of thirty-eight males and five females, whose
salaries amount in the aggregate to the sum of
£3,903 4s.

HIGHGATE, FROM UPPER HOLLOWAY. (From Chatelain, 1745.)
With such a population as that which this place
contains, it can hardly be supposed that the rules
and regulations of the prison are not sometimes
broken, or that the warders and other officials
have at times some very refractory characters to
deal with. That this is the case the reader may
conclude on learning that during the year above
mentioned recourse was had to irons and handcuffs
in seven cases among the male criminals for prison
offences; that eighty males and one female had to
be placed in the solitary or dark cells; and 1,435
males and one female had to undergo punishment
in the shape of a stoppage of diet.
"On several occasions," observes the writer on
Prison Discipline in "Chambers' Encyclopædia,"
"grave abuses have been exposed by Parliamentary
inquiries and otherwise, in the practice of prison
discipline in this country. The exertions of John
Howard, Mrs. Fry, and other investigators, awakened
in the public mind the question, whether any
practice in which the public interest was so much
involved should be left to something like mere
chance—to the negligence of local authorities, and
the personal disposition of gaolers. The tendency
lately has been to regulate prison discipline with extreme care. The public sometimes complain that
too much pains is bestowed on it—that criminals
are not worthy of having clean, well-ventilated
apartments, wholesome food, skilful medical attendance, industrial training, and education, as they
now have in this country. There are many arguments in favour of criminals being so treated, and
the objections urged against such treatment are
held, by those who are best acquainted with the
subject, to be invalid; for it has never been maintained by any one that a course of crime has been
commenced and pursued for the purpose of enjoying the advantages of imprisonment. Perhaps
those who chiefly promoted the several prominent
systems expected from them greater results in the
shape of the reformation of criminals than any
that have been obtained. If they have been disappointed in this, it can, at all events, be said
that any prison in the now recognised system is
no longer like the older prisons—an institution in
which the young criminals advance into the rank
of proficients, and the old improve each other's
skill by mutual communication. The system now
received is that of separation, so far as it is practicable. Two other systems were tried—the silent
system and the solitary system. The former
imposed entire silence among the prisoners even
when assembled together; the latter endeavoured
to accomplish their complete isolation from sight
of or communication with their race. By the
separate system, the criminals are prohibited from
communicating with each other; but they are
visited by various persons with whom intercourse
is more likely to elevate than to debase—as chaplains, teachers, Scripture-readers, the superior officers
of the prison, and those who have the external
control over it."
It may be interesting to learn that the moral
welfare of the inmates receives the greatest attention. A Bible, prayer-book, and hymn-book are
placed at the disposal of every prisoner, besides
books from the prison library. Two services are
held in the chapel every Sunday, and one on Good
Friday and Christmas Day; and prayers are read
daily to the prisoners by the chaplain, who gives
an address on Wednesdays and Fridays always,
and frequently on other days a short exhortation.
Prisoners not belonging to the Established Church
have the privilege of being visited by ministers
of their several communions. Uneducated male
prisoners receive two hours' secular instruction
weekly, in classes; and in special cases, individual
instruction in their cells. The females receive
four hours' instruction weekly in class, and have
lessons in their cells also.
Opposite the gates of the City Prison, standing
at the junction of Park Road and Camden Road,
is the Camden Town Athenæum. This building,
which was erected in 1871, we have described in a
former chapter. (fn. 5)
Adjoining the above building, in the Camden
Road, is the New Jerusalem Church, a handsome
Gothic edifice, with a lofty spire; and at the
eastern end of the road, at its junction with the
Caledonian and Holloway Roads, stands the
Holloway Congregational Chapel.
On the north-east side of the Holloway Road,
and forming a continuation of Camden and Park
Roads, is the Seven Sisters' Road, which leads to
Finsbury Park, and so on to Tottenham, leaving
the Holloway reservoir of the New River Company
on the right side of the road. The "Seven Sisters"
was the sign of an old public-house at Tottenham,
in the front of which were planted seven elms in
a circle, with a walnut-tree in the middle. They
were upwards of 500 years old, and the tradition
ran that a martyr had been burnt on the spot
where they stood. The trees were more recently
to be seen at the entrance of the village from Page
Green; and when they died off, a few years ago,
they were replaced by others. But we shall have
more to say about them when we reach Tottenham. At a short distance beyond the Seven Sisters'
Road is Holloway Hall, a large but plain modern
edifice, used for concerts, lectures, and similar
entertainments.
Passing northward along the Holloway Road,
having on our left side Tufnell Park, Dartmouth
Park, and other estates now being rapidly covered
with buildings, and named after their respective
ground-landlords, we next wend our way through
Upper Holloway, a place, as we have shown in a
previous volume, (fn. 6) at one time noted for its cheesecakes.
The old "Half Moon" and the "Mother Red
Cap" taverns, of which we have spoken in the
volume referred to, have both been modernised, or,
for the most part, rebuilt. The former house was
struck by lightning about the year 1846. A view
of the old tavern appears in the Builder of that
date.
In Alfred Terrace, near the Upper Holloway
station on the Midland Railway, is one of the
numerous charitable institutions that abound in
this neighbourhood, namely, St. Saviour's Hospital
and Refuge for Women and Children. It was
founded in 1864 for the purpose of rescuing young
women from a life of sin, and providing a refuge
for those fallen ones about to become mothers,
as well as a home for their children; it is said to
be the only institution of its kind. The hospital
is wholly dependent on voluntary contributions.
During the year ending March, 1876, 250 cases
were relieved, the average number in the institution
being seventy.
On the left-hand side of the road, just beyond
the railway station, and near the foot of Highgate
Hill, stands St. John's Church, a large brick
building of the "Perpendicular" style of architecture, erected in 1828 from the designs of Sir
Charles Barry. The church was one of those built
under the auspices of the late Dr. Wilson, some
time Vicar of Islington, and afterwards Bishop of
Calcutta.
At the foot of Highgate Hill, and in the angle
formed by its junction with the Archway Road,
stands the Archway Tavern, a house which has
long been used as the starting-point for the various
lines of omnibuses, and more recently for the cars
of the various tramway lines which run from that
point.
In this neighbourhood, in former times, were
the residences of a few families of distinction;
notably among them were the Blounts, of whom
we have already spoken. Howitt, in his "Northern
Heights of London," says that "in Nelson's time
there were some old houses which appeared to have
belonged to persons of eminence, on the north
side of the road at Upper Holloway. In one of
them, which became the 'Crown' public-house, and
which has long disappeared, there was a tradition
that Cromwell had lived. Nelson doubts Cromwell
ever having a house there, but thinks he might
have visited his friend, Sir Arthur Haselrigge,
who, undoubtedly, had a residence in Islington, as
appears by the following entry in the journals of
the House of Commons, May 21, 1664–5:—'Sir
Arthur Haselrigge, by command of the House,
related the circumstance of an assault made on him
by the Earl of Stamford, and Henry Polton and
Mathew Patsall, his servants, in the highway leading from Perpoole Lane, Clerkenwell, as he was
peaceably riding from the House of Commons to
his house in Islington, by striking him with a drawn
sword, and other offensive instruments, and was
enjoined to keep the peace, and not to send or
receive a challenge.'"
Of the dangers of the roads, particularly in the
northern suburbs, in the last century, we have
already had occasion more than once to speak.
Claude Duval, the dashing highwayman, as we
have intimated in our account of Tyburn, (fn. 7) made
Holloway one of the chief scenes of his predatory
exploits. Of the house supposed to have been
occupied by him in this neighbourhood we have
spoken in our notice of the Hornsey Road. (fn. 8)
Duval's Lane, branching from Holloway, within
our grandfathers' memory, was so notoriously infested with highwaymen that few people would
venture to peep into it even in mid-day. Another
highwayman who infested Holloway and the back
lanes of Islington, in the early part of the last
century, was none other than the noted "Dick"
Turpin. On the 22nd of May, 1737, he here robbed
several persons in their coaches and chaises. One
of the gentlemen so stopped signified to him that
he had reigned a long time. Turpin replied, "'Tis
no matter for that, I am not afraid of being taken
by you; therefore, don't stand hesitating, but give
me the gold."
It may be added that Holloway shares with
Hornsey, Finchley, and Kentish Town the benefits
of Sir Roger Cholmeley's benefaction as founder of
the Grammar School at Highgate.
There is but little else to record in the way
of historical memorabilia so far as Holloway is
concerned. One fact, however, of some little
literary interest must not be passed over by us
here, for in Holloway there were living, as recently
as the year 1735, Mary and Catherine Milton, the
nieces of the poet, daughters of his brother, Sir
Christopher. A note in Hazlitt's edition of Johnson's "Lives of the Poets" tells us that "at that
time these ladies possessed a degree of health and
strength as enabled them on Sundays and Prayer
Days to walk a mile up the steep hill to Highgate
Chapel. One of them was ninety-two at the time
of her death. The parentage of these ladies," he
adds, "was known to few persons, and their names
were corrupted into 'Melton.'" We have incidentally mentioned, in a former part of this work, (fn. 9)
another relative, and, indeed, a descendant of the
poet, Elizabeth, daughter of the poet's daughter
Deborah, who, having married Thomas Foster, a
weaver in Spitalfields, kept "a petty grocer's or
chandler's shop" in Holloway. She knew, however, little of her grandfather, and that little was
not good; for she was chiefly eloquent on the poet's
harshness towards his daughters, and his refusal to
have them taught to write. In 1750 Comus was
played for her benefit, which realised £130. Dr.
Johnson wrote the prologue, which was spoken
by Garrick himself, and Tonson was among the
contributors. With this addition to their store
she and her husband removed to Islington; and
this is said to have been the greatest pecuniary
benefit which Milton's family ever derived from
his service of the Muses.
One of the oldest institutions at the foot of
Highgate Hill, just where it slopes quietly down
into Holloway, was a lazar-house, or hospital
for lepers. The building stood as nearly as possible on the site of Salisbury Road, which was laid
out about the year 1852. Stowe, in speaking of
"leprous people and lazar-houses," enumerates
certain lazar-houses "built without the city some
good distance; to wit, the Lock without Southwark, in Kent Street; one other betwixt the Milesend and Stratford, near Bow; one other at Kingsland, betwixt Shoreditch and Stoke Newington;
and another at Knightsbridge, west from Charing
Cross."There were, however, at least three or
four others round London—namely, at Hammersmith, Finchley, and Ilford. Of that at Knightsbridge we have spoken in a former chapter. (fn. 10) The
chapel of the hospital at Kingsland was pulled
down in 1846. Stow, who rightly distinguishes
between those lazar-houses provided for patients
"without the city," and institutions not exclusively
devoted to the purposes of the citizens, confines his
notice to the first-named four: "These four," he
says, "I have noted to be erected for the receipt
of leprous people sent out of the city." But these
houses were not wholly limited to sufferers from
that disease. The accounts of St. Bartholomew's
Hospital, about the middle of the sixteenth century, contain items of expenses incurred for the
removal of general patients to all of them, including "this lazar-house at Holloway," the prevalence
of leprosy having then considerably diminished.
Leprosy was "the linenless disease." "This
phrase," remarks Mr. W. Howitt, in his "Northern
Heights of London," "denotes the true cause of
leprosy—the wearing of woollen garments next the
skin; for through the habit of not having these
garments regularly changed and washed, but wearing
them till saturated with perspiration, the skin becomes diseased. On the introduction of linen and
more frequent washing this loathsome disease
rapidly disappeared."
This house was, in one sense, a royal foundation,
as we gather some particulars of it from Stow's remarks. He says, "Finally, I read that one William
Pole, yeoman of the crown to King Edward IV.,
being stricken with a leprosy, was also desirous to
build an hospital to the honour of God and St.
Anthony, for the relief and harbouring of such
leprous persons as were destitute in the kingdom,
to the end they should not be offensive to others
in their passing to and fro: for the which cause
Edward IV. did by his charter, dated the [24th
day of February, 1473, in the] twelfth of his reign,
give unto the said William for ever a certain
parcel of his land lying in his highway of Highgate and Holloway, within the county of Middlesex, containing sixty feet in length and thirty-four
in breadth." The intention of William Pole was
carried into effect; for, four years afterwards (1477),
we find that the king gave and granted to Robert
Wilson, who, although described in the grant as a
saddler of London, yet appears to have been a
disabled soldier, and to have served in the Wars
of the Roses, and also to have been afflicted with
leprosy: "The new lazar-house at Hygate, which
we lately caused to be constructed by William
Pole, not long since one of the yeomen of our
crown, now deceased, to have and to hold the same
house, with the appurtenances, of our gift and of
our almoign, to the same Robert Wylson, for the
term of his life, without any matter or account
therefor to us to be yielded or paid." The next
grant that occurs is in the fifth year of the reign of
Henry VII., when John Gymnar and Katharine
his wife have conferred upon them the "keepership (custodiam) of a certain hospital, with a certain
chapel of St. Anthony, being between Highgate
and Holwey (sic), in our county of Middlesex, to
have and to enjoy the same keepership to the
aforesaid John and Katharine during their lives,
and the longest liver of them." No allusion to
leprosy appears in this record, nor is the hospital
even styled a lazar-house; from which it may be
inferred that this dreadful disease was then declining, or else that it was designed to subserve
more general purposes. We meet with no further
records of appointments to this hospital till far
into the reign of Henry VIII., when we find one
under the Privy Seal, whereby one Simon Guyer
had a grant for life of the "Spytyl Howse of Holowey, Middlesex." Perhaps, it has been suggested,
the poverty of the institution, coupled with the
decline of leprosy, may have rendered the appointment of little worth. That the institution was in
some respects supported by "voluntary contributions," or offerings at the chapel of St. Anthony, is
evidenced by a bequest in the will of William
Cloudesley, of Islington, dated 13th of January,
1517: "Item, I bequeath to the poor lazars of
Hyegate, to pray for me by name in their bede role,
6s. 8d."
A contributor to the Gentleman's Magazine,
writing on the subject, remarks that in the reign of
Queen Elizabeth the appointment to this hospital,
if we may judge from the formality and length of
the grant, was considered an object of emolument;
for on the 23rd of March, 1565, the queen, "in
consideration of his services in the wars of her
progenitors, and in consideration of his age, gave
and granted to William Storye, the governance
(gubernationem) of our hospital or almshouse at
Highgate, in our county of Middlesex, commonly
called the poorhouse or hospital of Highgate,
within the parish of Islington, with all its rights,
members, and appurtenances, and also the keepership and governance of all the poor persons, from
time to time in the same house being, to have,
hold, and enjoy the keepership and governance of
the hospital or house aforesaid, and of the paupers
aforesaid, during his natural life, without account,
or yielding, or paying any other thing therefor to
us, our heirs or successors. Provided always, that
the afore-named William Storye during his natural
life shall find and provide for all the poor persons
in the house aforesaid, from time to time being,
victuals as other governors or keepers of the
hospital or house aforesaid heretofore have from
time to time been accustomed to do, and that he
will repair, sustain, and maintain the said house in
all necessary reparations so often as need or occasion shall require."From this it appears that the
hospital had lost its character as a leper-house, as
well as its religious associations; for the Reformation must have swept away Saint Anthony and all
his belongings long before the date of the above
appointment. However, in common parlance, it
still retained its name of the "spittle-house" as
well as that of a common poor-house; and, as late
as 1605, an inmate (presumedly an infant) is described as "a lazar of our spital," in the parish
register of St. Mary, at Islington, from the pages
of which it may be gathered that the inmates of
this institution were, at the end of the sixteenth
and commencement of the seventeenth century,
such as were subsequently provided for in parish
workhouses. The keeper, ruler, or governor, was
also commonly called the "guide," being in fact
some person of medical education, or one whose
previous pursuits may have qualified him for undertaking the duties of such a charge. Here are a
few of the entries in the parish register of St. Mary,
Islington, above referred to, some of which are
curious:—
Thomas Patton was buried from the Spittle howse, the
24th Jan. 1582.
Ralph Buxton was buried from the Spitle howse on the
30 of October 1583.
Joane Bristowe, from the pore howse at Higate, was
buried the 1 Oct. 1583.
William Storye, Gwyder of ye pore-howse, at Upper
Holloway, was buried the 30th day of March, ao 1584.
Jerome Tedder was buried from the same howse the 23rd
March 1584.
A pore man, from Spitle howse at Upper Holloway, was
buried ye 15 June, 1584.
A dome child, from the Spittle howse at Upper Holloway,
was buried the 30th July, 1576.
Anne, the daughter of Thomas Watson, guyde of the
Spitle howse at Higate, was buried the 5th day of Sept. 1593.
A crisom childe from the Spittle howse was buried the
4th day of May, 1593.
Three children from the Spittle howse, sonnes of Arthur
Hull, 13 Sept. 1603.
Anne Symonds from the Spittle howse, bd. 13 Sept. 1603.
Jerome Coxe, the Innocente, was buried from the Spitle
howse, 15 Sept. 1603.
Elizabeth —, a childe putt to the Spittle howse by
Mr. Struggs the butcher, was buried the 5th day of October
1603.
Elizabeth Slatewell, lazer of our Spitle, was baptised at
the Spittle the thirde day of Sept. 1605.
After Storey's death, in March, 1584, a similar
grant and appointment passed the great seal
(July 14) in favour of John Randall, to whom,
in consideration of his infirmity, was granted the
keepership in precisely the same form; and about
five years later he received a second grant and
appointment in the same words as the former, but
with the addition of "all and singular orchards,
gardens, lands, tenements, meadows, pastures, and
hereditaments whatsoever to the same almshouse
belonging or appertaining, and together with the
same house heretofore used, letten, or granted, or
as part, parcel, or member of the said almshouse
heretofore being, with all other rights, members,"
&c. With a proviso that if he should at any time
abuse his keepership, or the poor persons aforesaid, or should not demean himself properly, the
appointment should be void.
In due course, the time came when all property
of the Crown was carefully surveyed and sold to
the best bidder; and, therefore, among them the
old "Lazar House" passed into private hands.
By deed of indenture enrolled in Chancery, in
1653, and made between William Steele, Esq.,
Recorder of London, Thomas Coke, William
Bosserville, and others, being persons entrusted by
an Act of Parliament with "the sale of all the
manors and lands heretofore belonging to the late
king of England, or queen, or prince," of the one
part, and Ralph Harrison, Esq., of London, of the
other part, it was witnessed, that in consideration
of £130 10s. paid by the said Ralph Harrison,
"they bargained and sold to him all that messuage
or tenement, with the appurtenances, commonly
called or known by the name of the 'Spittle
House,' situate and being near the roadway leading from London, between Highgate and Holloway, within the parish of Islington, in the county
of Middlesex; and all the houses, outhouses, yards,
gardens, yard and curtilage, to the same belonging,
or in any wise appertaining, containing in the
whole by estimation two roods, be the same more
or less, of the possessions of Charles Stuart, late
King of England, and of the yearly value of nine
pounds."

THE ROMAN ROAD, TUFNELL PARK, IN 1838.
It is somewhat singular that after a lapse of two
or three centuries another institution for dealing
with a malady very similar in its loathsomeness to
the leprosy should have been established almost
upon the site of the old Lazar House; but so it is.
About the year 1860 the Small-pox and Vaccination Hospital was removed hither from King's
Cross, where, as we have already seen, it had previously stood upon the site now occupied by the
Great Northern Railway Station. (fn. 11) On page 361
will be found an engraving of the original edifice
at King's Cross previous to its demolition in the
year 1850, or thereabouts. The present hospital
is an attractive building standing upon its own
grounds, slightly receding from the roadside, in
Whittington Place. The institution was originally
founded in 1746, "to receive and treat medically
persons suffering from small-pox, and to vaccinate
others." During the year 1874 about 200 inpatients were received, and 300 persons were
vaccinated; but in times when the small-pox is
prevalent in the metropolis the resources of this
hospital are taxed on a far larger scale.

WHITTINGTON'S STONE IN 1820. (From an Original Sketch.)
At the foot of the steep road which leads up
Highgate Hill, almost in front of the site of the old
Lazar House, and at the corner of Salisbury Road
is a public-house rejoicing in the sign of the "Whittington Stone," the stone itself being at the edge
of the pavement in front. The stone, an upright
block about three feet high, resting upon a circular
slab of stone, is enclosed by an iron railing painted
and gilt, from which springs four uprights bearing
a lamp. Upon the stone is the following inscription:—
Whittington Stone.
Sir
Richard Whittington,
Thrice Lord Mayor
of London.
1397. Richard II.
1406. Henry IV.
1420. Henry V.
Sheriff in 1393.
This stone was restored,
The railing fixed, and lamp erected,
A.D. 1869.
It marks the spot on which, as we are told, stood
the mile-stone at which the poor boy, Dick Whittington, is said to have rested when he listened to
the peal of Bow Bells, and heard them, or fancied
that he heard them, say—
"Turn again, Whittington,
Lord Mayor of London town."
It is stated in the Ambulator that the original stone,
being broken in two pieces, was removed hence to
the corner of Queen's Head Lane, in Lower Street,
and placed against the posts to serve as curbstones. A correspondent in the Gentleman's Magazine, for September, 1824, alluding to the story of
Whittington, observes, "A stone at the foot of
Highgate Hill was supposed to have been placed
there by him, on the spot where he had heard
Bow bells. It had a pavement around it of about
eighteen feet in circumference. This stone remained till about 1795, when one S—, who was
a parish officer of Islington, had it removed and
sawn in two, and placed the halves on each side of
Queen's Head Lane, in the Lower Street, Islington.
The pavement he converted to his own use, and
with it paved the yard of the 'Blue Last' publichouse (now the 'Marlborough Head'), Islington."
Whereupon, it is added, some of the parishioners
expressing their dissatisfaction, Mr. Finch, a mason,
was employed to place another stone in its stead,
on which the inscription "Whittington's Stone"
was cut. Another correspondent of the abovementioned work also observed, "Some land, I
have always been told, lying on the left-hand side
on ascending the hill, and probably just behind the
stone, is held on the tenure of keeping the stone
in repair; and when the officious interference of
S— removed the stone and pavement surrounding
it, a new one was immediately placed there of
smaller dimensions, though it was never known by
whom." "The substituted stone of 1795," writes
a subsequent correspondent of Sylvanus Urban,
"in fact, consisted of three stones, namely, the
stone called Whittington's, and the two bases that
were placed in order to keep the Whittington
stone upright, and to render it as much in conformity with the ancient stone as circumstances
would allow; but that this second Whittington
stone was removed in May, 1821, by order of
the churchwardens of St. Mary, at Islington, at a
cost of £10 13s. 8d., when the present battered
memorial was set up at the point where it now
stands, and till this last summer it stood at the
edge of the causeway or raised footpath in a bend
of that side of the road, which evidently owed its
irregular form from the room occupied by the preceding Whittington's Stone; but a straight pavement being now made, the stone at present stands
between that and the site of the ancient curved
causeway—in fact, between the footpath and the
field, instead of fronting the high road as before.
I may here mention that this field, in the ancient
Court Rolls of the manor of St. Mary, Clerkenwell,
is styled the Lazarett Field, and the Lazarcot Field,
although in later documents it has obtained the
name of the Blockhorse Field, an appellation
evidently derived from the use to which the stone
had been applied." (fn. 12)
In the year 1745 a print was published, from a
drawing by Chatelain, in which the observations of
the writer quoted above, showing a traditional connection between the field and the stone, are, to a
certain extent, borne out. The engraving is a
view of Highgate from Upper Holloway, (fn. 13) taken
from a point a little below the place where Whittington's Stone stands, or stood, in which the stone
appears as the base or plinth of a cross, with part
of the pillar still remaining; and it has been suggested that what was formerly called Whittington's
Stone was nothing else than a way-side cross in
front of the chapel of St. Anthony, erected for the
purpose of attracting the notice of the traveller to
the unhappy objects of the hospital, and as a
means of soliciting the alms of the charitable, and
consequently erected long after the time when
Whittington flourished. Considering that, according to a note of Mr. W. J. Thoms, in his edition
of Stow's "London" (1842), the earliest narrative of
Whittington's road-side adventure is to be found
in a work published as late as 1612 (Johnson's
"Crown Garland of Roses"), and that the existence of what served for a way-side seat can in
every probability be shown to have been commenced
long after Whittington had ended his prosperous
days, we are afraid that we must dismiss not only
the story of the "cat," but also the very pretty
legend which shows the favourite hero of our childhood as making his escape from the drudgery to
which he had been consigned in the house of the
rich London merchant, Fitzwarren, and resting by
the way-side cross at Holloway. Of Whittington's
birth and parentage, of his benefactions to the City,
and how he was four times Lord Mayor of London,
we have already spoken in our chapter on "famous
Lord Mayors;" (fn. 14) but as Holloway is so closely
associated with him, not only from the popular
legend above referred to, but also from the almshouses or college which bear his name, to pass
him over without any further mention would be
like putting on the stage the play of Hamlet
and at the same time omitting the character of the
Prince of Denmark. We will therefore narrate
what Grafton says about him, as quoted in Keightley's "Tales and Popular Fictions:"—"This year
[1406] a worthy citizen of London, named Richard
Whittington, mercer and alderman, was elected
mayor of the said city, and bore that office three
times. This worshipful man so bestowed his goods
and substance to the honour of God, to the relief
of the poor, and to the benefit of the commonweal, that he hath right well deserved to be registered in the book of fame. First, he erected one
house, a church, in London, to be a house of
prayer, and named the same after his own name,
Whittington College, and so it remaineth to this
day; and in the said church, beside certain priests
and clerks, he placed a number of poor aged men
and women, and builded for them houses and lodgings, and allowed unto them wood, coal, cloth,
and weekly money, to their great relief and comfort. This man, also, at his own cost, builded the
gate of London called Newgate, in the year of
our Lord, 1422, which before was a most ugly and
loathsome prison. He also builded more than
half of Saint Bartholomew's Hospital, in West
Smithfield, in London. Also he builded, of hardstone, the beautiful library in the Grey Friars, in
London, now called Christ's Hospital, standing in
the north part of the cloister thereof, where in the
walls his arms are graven in stone. He also
builded, for the ease of the mayor of London, and
his brethren, and of the worshipful citizens, at the
solemn days of their assembly, a chapel adjoining
to the Guildhall; to the intent they should ever,
before they entered into any of their affairs, first
go into the chapel, and, by prayer, call upon God
for His assistance. And in the end, joining on the
south side of the chapel, he builded for the City a
library of stone, for the custody of their records
and other books. He also builded a great part of
the east end of Guildhall, beside many other good
works that I know not. But among all others I
will show unto you one very notable, which I received credibly by a writing of his own hand,
which also he willed to be fixed as a schedule to
his last will and testament. He willed and commanded his executors, as they would answer before
God at the day of the resurrection of all flesh,
that if they found any debtor of his that ought to
him any money, if he were not, in their consciences,
well worth three times as much, and also out of the
debt of other men, and well able to pay, that then
they should never demand it, for he clearly forgave
it, and that they should put no man in suit for any
debt due to him. Look upon this, ye aldermen, for
it is a glorious glass!"
Stow informs us that Richard Whittington rebuilt
the parish church of St. Michael Royal, and made
a college of St. Spirit and St. Mary, with an almshouse, called God's House or Hospital, for thirteen
poor men, who were to pray for the good estate of
Richard Whittington, and of Alice his wife, their
founders; and for Sir William Whittington, knight,
and Dame Joan his wife; and for Hugh Fitzwarren,
and Dame Malde his wife, the fathers and mothers
of the said Richard Whittington, and Alice his
wife; for King Richard the Second, Thomas of
Woodstock, &c. Hence it clearly follows that Sir
Richard Whittington never could have been a
poor bare-legged boy; for it is here plainly stated
that his father was a knight, no mean distinction
in those days. Yet in every popular account of
Whittington, he is said to have been born in very
humble circumstances. This erroneous idea has
evidently been owing to the popular legend of him
and his cat, and it shows how fiction will occasionally drive Truth out of her domain. Such,
then, is the real history of this renowned Lord
Mayor; but tradition, we know, tells a very different tale. In the words of Whitehead in the
"Legends of London:"—
"The music told him in the chime
That Whittington must 'turn again,'
And by good fortune high should climb,
And as the city's magnate reign.
"The boy, by listening, fancy-led,
Quickly arose from off the stone,
And proudly raised his hand and head,
While thus his fortunes were made known.
"'Thrice, thrice Lord Mayor,' the bells repeat,
'Then turn again yet, Whittington:'
Thus was it still—the fond deceit
Beguiled his fancy on and on.
"And 'Whittington, then turn again,'
He saw the city spires afar,
And through a cloud of hovering rain
He saw there shone one lonely star.
"He hastened home, that rustic bell
Lulled him to sleep upon that night;
The pastoral dream, remembered well,
Lifted his hopes to high delight."
"In the whole of the legendary history," observes
a writer in the Saturday Magazine, "there does
not appear to be one single word of truth further
than this—that the maiden name of Lady Whittington was Alice Fitzwarren. It would be extremely
interesting to ascertain the exact age of the legend.
Neither Grafton nor Hollingshed, who copies him,
says anything of the legendary history of Sir
Richard; but the legend itself, as we now have it,
must have been current in the reign of Elizabeth,
for in the prologue to a play, written about 1613,
the citizen says:—'Why could you not be contented, as well as others, with the legend of Whittington? or the life and death of Sir Thomas Gresham, with the building of the Royal Exchange?
or the story of Queen Eleanor, with the rearing
of London Bridge upon woolsacks?' The word
legend in this case would seem to indicate the story
of the cat; and we cannot, therefore, well assign it
a later date than the sixteenth century. . . . .
Whittington's cat," continues the writer above
quoted, "has not escaped the shrewdness of those
persons who have a wonderful inclination to discover a groundwork of historical truth in popular
legends, for in some popular 'History of England,'
the story has been explained, as it is called; and
two or three country newspapers have copied the
explanation with evident delight. Sir Richard
Whittington was, it seems, the owner of a ship
named the Cat, by his traffic in which he acquired
the greater part of his wealth. It is not, however,
quite clear that our worthy mercer was directly engaged in foreign traffic."
A few yards before the traveller reaches the
Whittington Stone the road separates into two
branches, of which the right-hand one is a modern
cutting, known as the Archway Road, from its
passing under Highgate Archway, of which we
shall speak presently. On the right hand of this
road, but within the limits of Upper Holloway,
is situated Sir Richard Whittington's College, or
almshouse, originally founded in the parish of St.
Michael Paternoster, London, by the celebrated
Lord Mayor, (fn. 15) who, in 1421, left the residue of his
estate for the foundation and endowment of almshouses for thirteen poor people under the control
of the Mercers' Company. William Howitt, in his
"Northern Heights of London," thus relates the
story of the foundation of these almshouses:—"The
Mercers' Company having in hand £6,600 from
the estates of Sir Richard Whittington, in 1822,
commenced establishing a set of almshouses for
twenty-four single women not having individually
property to the amount of £30 a year. They receive a yearly stipend of £30 each, besides other
gifts, with medical attendance and nurses in time
of illness. At first the establishment was proposed
to be erected on the main road up Highgate Hill,
near to the Whittington's Stone; but the ground
not being procurable, they built it in the Archway
Road instead, but still near to the stone which
commemorates the name of the founder. This is
a much better situation, however, on account of its
greater openness and retirement. The buildings
are Gothic, of one storey, forming three sides of a
quadrangle, having the area open to the road. In
the centre of the main building is a chapel or
oratory for the reading of daily prayers. The
establishment has its tutor, or master, its matrons,
nurses, gardener, gate-keeper, &c. It is a remarkably pleasant object viewed from the road, with its
area embellished by a shrubbery and sloping
lawn." The remarks of Mr. Howitt in censure of
the "miserable philosophy, falsely called utilitarian,"
which would discourage the erection of such homes
and retreats for our aged poor, are such as can be
cordially endorsed by any one who has a heart to
feel for the sufferings of others.
The high road in this neighbourhood, and the
fields on either side, leading up the slopes of
Highgate, must have presented a strange sight
during the "great fire" of London, for John
Evelyn tells us, in his "Diary," that many of
the poorer citizens who had lost their all and
their homes in the conflagration, encamped hereabouts. "I then went," he writes, under date
Sept. 7th, 1666, "towards Islington and Highgate,
where one might have seen some 200,000 people,
of all ranks and degrees, dispersed and lying along
by their heaps of what they could save from the
fire, deploring their loss; and yet ready to perish
for hunger and destitution, yet not asking one
penny for relief, which to me seemed a stranger
sight than any I had yet beheld."
The houses on the road which leads from the
"Archway" Tavern up to Highgate are poor and
mean, and inhabited by more than a fair proportion of laundresses and rag-shop keepers. But in
the parts which lie off the road are many comfortable mansions, belonging, for the most part, to
retired citizens. Few of them, however, are old
enough to have a history.