Horseferry Road - Wikipedia
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Horseferry Road is a street in the City of Westminster in central London running between Millbank and Greycoat Place and designated part of the B323 road, along with Greycoat Place, Artillery Row and Buckingham Gate.[1] It is perhaps best known as the site of City of Westminster Magistrates' Court (which until 2006 was called Horseferry Road Magistrates' Court), whose ubiquity in newspaper crime reports means that the road name has wide recognition in the UK. It is not to be confused with streets of the same name in Limehouse, London E14, parallel to Narrow Street, and off Creek Road in Greenwich.
Other notable institutions which are or have been located on Horseferry Road include Broadwood and Sons, the Gas Light and Coke Company, British Standards Institution, the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, the Burberry Group, the Environment Agency headquarters in Horseferry House, the National Probation Service, the Department for Transport at no. 33 and Channel 4. The Marsham Street Home Office building backs on to this road. Phyllis Pearsall conceived and created the London A to Z map while living in a bedsit in Horseferry Road.[2]
The road takes its name from the ferry which existed on the site of what is now Lambeth Bridge.[3] Owned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the ferry was an important crossing over the Thames, from Westminster Palace to Lambeth Palace.[4] The earliest known reference to the ferry dates to 1513, but there may have been a ford near the site in Roman times. The ferry pier was the starting point for the flight of King James II from England in 1689. In 1736, Princess Augusta, who became the mother of George III, crossed the Thames via the horse ferry on the way to her wedding.
In 1734, plans were drawn up for a bridge to replace the ferry. An Act of Parliament was passed in 1736, and the money was raised by lottery and grants. Parliament changed the plans for the position of the bridge, and Westminster Bridge was finished first, resulting in the gradual decline of the ferry. It was eventually replaced on 10 November 1862, when the first Lambeth Bridge was opened. It quickly deteriorated, and was replaced in 1932.
This was the location of No. 5 (London) Regional Fire Control Centre during World War II,[5] and the headquarters of 26th Middlesex (Cyclist) Volunteer Rifle Corps.[6] The building was most recently used by the Home Office to house Prison and Probation head office staff, and is as of 2007 being converted into residential flats.
Westminster College
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Established by the Methodist Church in 1851, Westminster Training College was on the street until it relocated to Oxford in 1959. Today their Oxford site is the Harcourt Hill Campus of Oxford Brookes University, where their archives and art collections can still be viewed. Their site on Horseferry Road is now the location for the Channel 4 Headquarters, which were built there in 1994.
The regimental headquarters and museum of the London Scottish Regiment is in a 1985 building at no. 95, on the former site of the Industrial Museum. That Museum was completed in 1914 but was used for educational and social purposes by the Australian Imperial Force (AEF) and Metropolitan Police until the Museum finally opened in it in 1927.
AEF Administrative Headquarters
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The AEF also had its administrative HQ on the street, in buildings rented from Westminster College throughout the war while the college was evacuated to Richmond.[7]
- ^ "B323". Sabre Roads. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
- ^ "Blue plaque award for founder of the A-Z". BBC News. 13 July 2006.
- ^ "Horseferry Road Magistrates' Court history". HM Courts & Tribunals Service. 11 May 2005. Archived from the original on 14 May 2011.
- ^ "Lambeth Bridge and its predecessor the Horseferry". Lambeth: South Bank and Vauxhall. Survey of London. Vol. 23. 1951. pp. 118–121. Retrieved 3 October 2007.
- ^ "SiteName: London – Home Security Region 5 War Room". Subterranea Britannica.
- ^ "25th (County of London) (Cyclist) Battalion, The London Regiment". regiments.org. Archived from the original on 17 August 2007.
- ^ "Australians in France: 1918 – Friends and Foe – Australian soldiers' relations with their superiors". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved 3 May 2011.