Rainbow Coffee House Explained

51.5137°N -0.1111°WThe Rainbow Coffee House was a famous coffee house located at 15 Fleet Street, London.[1] It was opened by James Farr in 1657, becoming London's second coffee house.[2]

The Rainbow provided a meeting place for freemasons and French refugee Huguenots who established an information centre there.[3] The Rainbow was also featured in the furore created by Titus Oates, who accused Sir Philip Lloyd of denying the existence of a popish plot there, finding witnesses from amongst the coffee drinkers to testify against him[4]

In 1719 John Woodward wrote a satire The Two Sosias: Or, the True Dr. Byfield at the Rainbow Coffee-House, to the Pretender in Jermyn-Street

David Hughson wrote in 1807 that the Rainbow was replaced by Nando's Coffee House in the same building, later in the 17th century.[5]

Notable people

Many notable Huguenots were associated with the Rainbow Coffee House. However, there were also other German and English notable people.[6]

French exiles

Others

Notes and References

  1. Book: Norman. Philip. London Vanished & Vanishing. 1905. Macmillan. en.
  2. Web site: London Coffee houses and mathematics . August 15, 2012 . J J O'Connor . & Robertson . E F .
  3. Book: Critique and Crisis . Berg . Koselleck, Reinhart . 1988 . Oxford . 64 . 085496 535 1.
  4. Web site: Coffee-houses of old London . August 15, 2012 . Shelley, Henry C..
  5. Book: Hughson. David. London. 1807. 57. en.
  6. Book: The Religious Culture of the Huguenots, 1660-1750 . Ashgate . Dunan-Page, Anne . 2006 . 166.