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Extract from map of the old
Anglican church parishes in the 1870s which shows shaded red the western area inside the ancient city walls, and green: other areas of the City of London; the southern projection of St Bride Fleet Street formed the medieval estate of the Bishops of Salisbury which was
160:. The theatre is commemorated by a plaque on the Dorset Rise (east) side of the corporate building on the south side of Salisbury Square. By the early C19 the Salisbury Hotel occupied the south side of Salisbury Square, formerly the site of the Dorset Garden Theatre.
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acquired by Lloyd in 1876 also had its headquarters at 12 Salisbury Square. In 1918, when both newspapers were sold to the friends of Lloyd George they had 20% of the national newspaper market.
184:'s printing office was at the northwest corner of Salisbury Square, communicating with the court, No. 76, Fleet Street. Here Samuel Richardson wrote "Pamela," and here, in 1756,
119:, by and on part of the land, today the name of the narrow street which leads the square from the north. Salisbury Court was the medieval London house and episcopal court of the
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Between 1629 and 1666 a relatively long-lived theatre stood on its south side. The original building, repaired and altered, became Dorset House, as having been repossessed for
178:, a draper who became a politician and Lord Mayor of London. The obelisk was funded through public donation and calls Waithman "The friend of liberty in evil times."
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JM McKewan: Lloyd George’s
Acquisition of the Daily Chronicle in 1918, Journal of British Studies, Vol 22, No 1 (Autumn 1982) pp 127-144, Cambridge University Press
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would occupy these premises. The penny weekly romances aimed at the newly literate working classes published by Edward Lloyd (1815-1890) were given the name
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Detailed map of the theatre and the nascent square; the
Whitefriars theatre closed before the theatre opened as a legend to the map states.
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was the main promoter of the theatre and a patron of performing arts. The grounds and outbuildings of
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Joseph Hatton: ‘The Father of the Cheap Press’ in ‘Journalistic London’ from Harper’s
Magazine, 1882
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Old and New London: Volume 1. Originally published by
Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, 1878
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was one of the founding members. The debating group met at The Barley Mow pub from 1855.
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An obelisk currently stands in the middle of
Salisbury Square to Alderman
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Salisbury's Square central garden and its north-west buildings in 2018
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Louis James: Print and the People 1819-51, Penguin Books, 1976
232:"History of St Bride's: The advowson - British History Online"
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owned by the Earls of Dorset before the industrial revolution.
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12 Salisbury Square also became the publishing address of
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150:Great Fire of London
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75:History
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