Wander around Blackfriars, Ludgate Hill, Fleet Street and Chancery Lane and see various places in London associated with the English legal system.
Attractions include the area of Temple, Templars' Church, the Old Bailey, the Royal Courts of Justice and Sir John Soane's museum.
The walk starts from Blackfriars tube station and ends at Chancery Lane tube station
on arrival at Blackfriars tube station, take exit number 8 marked New
Bridge Street. Walk up New Bridge Street, cross the road and stop in front
of number 14.
Blackfriars and the old Bridewell House of Correction
Blackfriars was an important political
and religious centre during medieval times.
The Black Friar pub stands on the site of the old monastery and is the only art nouveau-decorated pub in London. The unusually-shaped building, in the shape of a wedge, was built in 1875.
Number 14 New Bridge Street marks the site of the old Bridewell
House of Correction.
It was built as a royal palace in 1515 and converted
into a prison, hospital and workrooms in 1556. As well as holding prisoners,
it became home to destitute children and orphans of the Freemen of
the City.
Many of the buildings were destroyed in the Great Fire of 1666
and later re-built. The prison was finally closed in 1855 (and its buildings
demolished in 1863) when prisoners of both sexes were moved to Holloway,
which is now London's prison for women.
Though, just like London's other historic prisons, Bridewell had its harsh
side, it was also the first to introduce better conditions for prisoners.
Public floggings took place twice weekly, and in 1628 a ducking stool
was set up on the river bank. However, the prison was the first to appoint
a prison doctor (in 1700) and to provide prisoners with straw bedding.
Did You Know?
The area around
Blackfriars was first settled around 1278, by Dominican monks. Under the
patronage of Edward I, the monks became rich and influential, soon building
a quay to enable trading. In 1311, Parliament met here and for many years
the monastery was used to hold state records.
The monastery was eventually dissolved in 1538 and many of the buildings
were demolished. However, the refectory was kept and used as a series of
playhouses during Elizabethan times until it too was destroyed, in the Great
Fire.
continue
along New Bridge Street and turn right along Pilgrim Street,
up the steps, then left at Pageant Master Court.
Cross Ludgate Hill and walk along Old Bailey
The Old Bailey (Central Criminal Court)

"Old Bailey" is the name by which most people know England's Central Criminal
Court.
The first court house on this site was built in 1539 and the current
buildings, which include at their base, stones from Newgate prison, date
from 1907. The buildings were badly damaged during the Blitz in 1942 and
bombed by the IRA in 1973.
The court is
reserved for trying the most serious crimes such as murder and famous
trials that have been held here include those of Oscar Wilde (1895), Dr
Crippen (1910) and the Yorkshire Ripper (1981).
You can view details of
all criminal trials held at the Old Bailey between 1674 and 1834 on their web site.
Pilgrim Street is said to be named after the pilgrims who walked along
it from the nearby Fleet River (near New Bridge Street) to St Pauls.
Ludgate Hill, which leads up to St
Pauls, is named after the Lud Gate, which was built nearby by King
Lud in 66 BC. (However, an earlier gate may actually have been built here
by the Romans to lead to one of their burial grounds in Fleet Street.)
The gate was damaged in the Great Fire and demolished in 1760. The area
was a fashionable shopping district in the seventeenth century.
Did You Know?
Records
of criminal London go back to medieval times. There are references from
the 13th century to burglaries, and organised crime started to emerge
in the 17th century.
Soon after, criminal areas developed, filled with
houses where boys could learn their trade - similar to Fagin's school
for boys described by Dickens in Oliver Twist. Nearby Fleet street
and its surrounding area was one such
place.
The penalty for many types of crime was death by hanging and thousands
of petty criminals took their last journey from Newgate to the gallows
at Tyburn (where Marble Arch now stands).
As London did not have a police
force until the early 19th century, crime fighting was left to watchmen,
constables and professional thief-takers (similar to modern private investigators).
It wasn't until 1829 that the Metropolitan Police force was created. As
Sir Robert Peel was the Home Secretary who pushed through the Act of Parliament
to create it, the police are still known as "Bobbies".
pass the Central Criminal
Court and stop at the corner of Old Bailey and Newgate Street
Newgate Prison and St Sepulchure's Church
The building on the corner of Old Bailey and Newgate Street
marks the site of Newgate Prison, which had stood here since the 12th
century.
It was destroyed during the Great Fire, and re-built, only to
be finally demolished in 1902.
As you might imagine, it was not a pleasant
place to be imprisoned within: there was no ventilation and little water
and it was ruled by highly corrupt prison guards (who made fortunes charging
prisoners for "privileges" such as being freed from shackles.)
Did You Know?
Prisoners from Newgate
Prison used to pray at St Sepulchure's, the church diagonally opposite, around their open coffins on the morning of their
execution.
Anatomy teachers used to buy bodies stolen from the church to use
in training their students at nearby Bart's Hospital.
return along Old Bailey and turn right, down Lime Burner Lane to Fleet Place and Farringdon Street
At Farringdon Street, turn left and walk to the main junction (Ludgate Circus).
Turn right along Fleet Street
Fleet Street area
Synonymous with printing and journalism for many years, Fleet Street was where Britain's first newspaper, the Daily Courant, was published
(nearby, at Ludgate Circus) in 1702. The street had been home
to many printers and booksellers, from the 1500's.
The former offices of two famous newspapers, the Daily Telegraph (at
no 135) and Daily Express (at no 121 - 128) , can still be seen here,
along with offices of Reuters,
the world's most famous news agency, which was established in 1855.
In 1846, Charles Dickens established his own newspaper, the Daily News,
at 90 Fleet Street. He resigned after only 17 issues but the paper continued,
as the News Chronicle, until 1960.
The satirical magazine, Punch, was
established at no 99 Fleet Street, in the Punch Tavern. (The bar is filled
with original drawings from the magazine.)
St Bride's church, on the left just after Ludgate Circus, is known as the journalist's church. Most of the pews are dedicated to Fleet street reporters and editors, and during John McCarthy's captivity in the Lebanon in the 1990's, allnight vigils were held here.
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese pub was re-built in the 1600's
and is one of London's few remaining old style pubs, with tiny rooms and
big tables. Famous customers have included Dr Samuel Johnson, Dickens
and Mark Twain.
One of its most infamous lodgers was a parrot whose knowledge
of abusive words was extensive. People came from all over to hear
it swear. When the parrot died in 1926, obituaries appeared in newspapers
throughout the English speaking world. It was even mentioned on the BBC.
Dr Johnson moved to a house in nearby Gough Square (you can reach it via Johnson's Court) in 1746,
and soon after, he started work on his famous Dictionary of the English Language.
In the 18th century, dictionaries weren't just consulted, they were browsed.
That was largely thanks to Johnson's mammoth 1755 achievement, wherein
he defined not just the difficult words, but also common words found in
everyday speech. To their definitions, he added illustrative quotations
from the finest works available at the time.
Though the dictionary made him famous,
it did not make him wealthy and he was arrested for debt in 1758, moving
out of this house the following year.
El Vino (no 47), a wine bar established in 1879 and located in Fleet Street since 1923, is famous for being found guilty, in 1982, of breaking the law by continuing to refuse to allow women customers to stand and be served at the bar.
Did You Know?
Though most famously known for his Dictionary, Dr Johnson wrote several other works including a complete edition of Shakespeare, a number of frequently cited political tracts, sermons, a description of his 1773 tour to Scotland with a Scot named James Boswell, and a series of biographies of numerous British poets (The Lives of the Poets), commissioned to accompany reprints of each poet's works.
After Johnson's death in 1784, Boswell published his biography of his friend, called The Life of Samuel Johnson, which provides us with much of what we know about the man, including many of the quotes to which he is attributed.
If you are doing this walk during weekdays, continue along Fleet Street and turn
left down Old Mitre Court to enter the area known as Temple.
Follow it down, turn right along Crown Office
Row and then right again
along Middle Temple Lane. On your left is Fountain Court, the prettiest
of the Inns of Court.
Turn right at Pump Court and through the cloisters to see the Templar's
Church at the end. Turn left along the narrow Inner Temple Lane and proceed back to Fleet Street.
Turn left along Fleet Street
(which becomes the Strand) to the junction with Middle Temple Lane (on the left).
Otherwise, at weekends, continue along Fleet Street to the junction with Middle Temple Lane (on the left).
Temple, and Templars' Church
The area you may have just walked through is known as Temple, which includes
two of the four Inns of Court (see below), the Middle Temple and the Inner
Temple.
The name, Temple, derives from the Order of the Knights Templar,
a chivalrous order established in 1118 for the purpose of protecting pilgrims.
(You may know of them as the knights who wore white tunics with red crosses
on them.) In 1162, the group built their first church and houses nearby,
on the banks of the Thames.
When the Templars were discredited in the 14th century, their property was
leased to lawyers who used it as a hostel. They continued as tenants until
Henry VIII appropriated the property.
In 1608, James I gave the freehold
of the "inns" to the lawyers, on the condition they maintained
it forever.
Today, barristers continue to have their offices (known as chambers)
here, in addition to training and practising in the area.
The building in
front of you is the main entrance to Middle Temple, built in 1684. The church
you may have passed is the Templars' Church, which was built in the 12th
century (though little of the original building remains). Secret initiation
ceremonies took place within its crypt and there are 13th century effigies
of the Knights Templar in the nave.
The section of Fleet Street you are now in marks the point where Fleet
Street meets the Strand. The spot is marked by a bronze griffin, the unofficial
badge of the City. (This is also where the City of London meets the City
of Westminster border.)
Since 1351, a gate called Temple Bar stood here.
It was repaired several times and from 1684 until 1746, was used to display
the heads of traitors. In 1806, it was draped in black for Lord Nelson's
funeral, and the gate was finally removed in 1878 because it was blocking
traffic.
Did You Know?
The legal
profession in England and Wales is made up of two separate groups - barristers
and solicitors.
A barrister is a lawyer who has been admitted by one of
the four Inns of Court to "plead at the bar" (address the court),
after having spent a year in pupilege with a practicing barrister and
passing a “bar exam”.
A solicitor (though qualified in the
law) is, however, rarely allowed “rights of access” to the
court and must usually instruct a barrister to present their client’s
case to the court for them.
The Inns of Court, which date from before the 14th century, were originally
eating and lodging places for students of the law. Though there are references
throughout history to over 30 different Inns, only four survive.
These are Lincoln’s, Gray’s, Inner Temple and Middle Temple. Each has its own colour: Green for Lincoln’s, black for each Temple (because the knights templar were a religious order) and red for Gray’s. They still offer accommodation and food, however only a few privileged judges and senior barristers have rooms there and these are mainly used only during week days.
The term “being called to the bar” refers to young barristers being allowed to practice: they are only permitted to do so after having eaten 24 dinners in one of the Inns, a tradition dating back centuries. This is because attending the dinners provides a student with an opportunity to mix with qualified colleagues and understand the traditions of “the bar”, such as never shaking hands with a fellow barrister.
Barristers are not supposed to discuss fees directly with the solicitors who instruct them, and the flap at the back of their gowns is supposedly where, in days of old, solicitors used to slip their payments.
continue along Fleet Street and stop at the corner of Essex Street
Royal Courts of Justice
The Royal
Courts of Justice ("the Law Courts") were built in the nineteenth
century to situate all English superior courts associated with non-criminal cases
(such as divorce, libel and civil cases) in one place.
Currently there are 60 courts in use, including the Court of Appeal, the
High Court and the Crown Court.
Three traditional legal ceremonies take place each year : in one, the
Corporation of the City of London pays its Quit Rent to the Crown for
land near Chancery Lane.
The rent is six horse shoes and sixty one nails which have been paid since
1118.
Directly opposite the Royal Courts is the original shop of Twinings Tea, which has been selling tea here since 1706.
St Clement Danes church is supposedly so named because a Danish King
and other Danes were buried here in ancient times. It is the central church
for the Royal Air Force.
Did You Know?
Though the heart of legal London could be defined as the area around the four Inns, in modern times much legal activity has moved to the City of London, further east.
These days, the large solicitors’ firms based in the City, with estimated combined earnings of £1 billion, far outweigh those of barristers based in the Inns.
London has nearly 15,000 solicitors. City solicitors firms not only deal with the commercial and financial legal activities of British businesses but now also handle the affairs of international clients.
cross the Strand and turn left, then right through a gate into Clements'
Inn. Walk along Clement's Inn Passage, which leads into Clare
Market. Turn right, then second left into Portsmouth Street, passing the
Old Curiosity Shop on the right.
Continue ahead, along the side of Lincoln's Inn Fields to the top, then
turn right and stop in front of Sir John Soane's Museum on the left.
Lincoln's Inn Fields
area
Lincoln's Inn Fields evolved from two waste grounds that had been playgrounds
for students of nearby Lincoln's Inn since the 14th century. It was London's
first garden square, though it was originally a public execution site.
In the 17th century, it was an exclusive area to live in. However, the
only houses remaining from this time (around 1641) are at no 59 and 60.
Since 1894, the gardens have been open to the public.
Alleged to be the fictional home of Charles Dickens' Little Nell, the
building housing the Old Curiosity Shop in Portsmouth Street was built in 1567. It is now a
listed building and thought to be the oldest shop in London.
Sir John Soane's museum is in a house he left to the nation in 1837. Soane was one of Britain's
leading architects and the designer of the Bank of England building. He lived
at no 13 and before he died, secured an Act of Parliament ensuring that
on his death the house and its contents would be left intact as a public museum.
The museum contains a variety of objects ranging from paintings, manuscripts,
pottery, antique marbles, books, scold's bridles, shackles, pistols belonging
to Napoleon and more.
Did You Know?
London
has more museums than most other cities in the world. Most were founded
between 1750 and 1914 to feed the appetite among Londoners for exploration
(both geographical and scientific) and fine art.
Its main and most visited museum is the British Museum, opened in Bloomsbury
in 1759. The main art museum is the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square
and the main historical museum is the Museum of London, at the Barbican.
There are also hundreds of smaller museums, ranging from the Wimbledon
Lawn Tennis museum through to the Museum of Garden History (in Lambeth)
and the Bethnal Green Museum of Childhood.
continue
ahead and turn left at the end, along Newman's Row. Go through Great Turnstile
to High Holborn. Turn right along High Holburn
until you reach Staple Inn, on your right.
Go down Staple Inn, follow the path to the right and up the stairs into
Southampton Buildings. Stop in front of the London Silver Vaults, on the
right.
High Holburn, Staple Inn and London Silver Vaults
High Holburn was a main road from the old City of London to the west,
and until the 15th century remained open country. It was named after the
ground above Hole Bourne stream.
Staple Inn was once a wool staple, where wool was weighed and taxed. The
building dates from 1378, though its facade is from 1586. It is the only
remaining Elizabethan half timbered frontage left in central London.
London's silver
vaults originate from the Chancery Lane Safe Deposit Company, which
was established in 1885. They are home to over 30 underground shops selling
all sorts of silverware, both antique and modern.
Did You Know?
London has had its share of gruesome murders, though most of the infamous addresses, such as 10 Rillington Place, Notting Hill (where John Christie murdered a number of women) have been changed. Others, such as 39 Hilldrop Crescent, where Dr Crippen buried his wife, have been demolished.
However, it is still possible to wander around the streets of Whitechapel where London’s most infamous and probably best known killer of all, Jack the Ripper, murdered a number of women.
Addresses that still exist include the Blind Beggar pub (in the East
End) where East End gang leader, Ronnie Kray, shot an underworld colleague,
and the Magdala pub in Hampstead, outside which Ruth Ellis (the last woman
to be hanged for murder in England) shot her unfaithful lover. The bullet holes are still in the walls of the pub.
continue to Chancery Lane, turn left along it (towards Fleet Street) and after a short distance, turn right through a wooden door or gateway to enter Lincolns Inn.
Lincolns Inn
Lincolns Inn is the oldest of the four Inns of Court, being able to trace its origins back to the fifteenth century or earlier.
The grounds, open to the public, include some remarkable medieval buildings, fortunately undamaged by the Blitz. It is a pleasant place to relax on a sunny day.
Did You Know?
Fifteen Prime Ministers, including Tony Blair and Margaret Thatcher, have been members of Lincolns Inn.
you have now completed this walk ...... I hope you enjoyed it
return to Chancery Lane, turn left and follow it along to High Holburn. Cross the road and turn right to Chancery Lane tube station.