Great James Street | |
Area: | Bloomsbury, London |
Postal Code: | WC1 |
Coordinates: | 51.5218°N -0.1172°W |
Completion Date: | c.1721 |
Known For: | Literary connections |
Great James Street is a street in the Bloomsbury district of the London Borough of Camden. It has strong literary and publishing connections, and former residents include the poet Algernon Charles Swinburne and the detective story writer Dorothy L. Sayers. The Nation & Athenaeum, chaired by John Maynard Keynes, and the Nonesuch Press were both based in the street. The street has almost all its original buildings with minimal external changes. It is described in Nikolaus Pevsner's guide as "a gem" and its mostly terraced houses as "unusually uniform for their date". The majority of the street is listed by Historic England.
Great James Street is the continuation of Bedford Row north of Theobalds Road in the Bloomsbury district of the London Borough of Camden. It joins Rugby Street and Millman Street in the north but is pedestrianised beyond the turning for Northington Street on its eastern side.[1]
A cartouche on number 16 dates Great James Street to 1721.[2] The street was named after James Burgess who worked with George Brownlow Doughty and his wife Frances Tichborne in the development of the area including the eponymous Doughty Street.[3]
On John Rocque's map of 1746 it was named just James Street and Northington Street was named Dennis's Passage before it became fully built up. James Court once existed opposite Dennis's Passage.[4] It was James Street too in John Lockie's gazetteer of 1813 but by then Dennis's Passage had become Little James Street.[5] In 1799, Richard Horwood's map showed the streets as Great and Little James Street respectively.[6]
The street has almost all its original buildings with minimal external changes. It is described in Pevsner's guide as "a gem" and its mostly terraced houses as "unusually uniform for their date".[2] The majority of the buildings are listed by Historic England at grade II or II* level. The architecture is in the Georgian style with the exception of Millman Place, a post-war development on the east side at the north end that extends into Millman Street via a second floor pedestrian bridge.[2]
At the north end on the western side on the corner with Rugby Street is the grade II listed The Rugby Tavern.
The street has strong literary and publishing connections and former residents include: