Thursday, 31 July 2014

Thomas Heneage and Heneage Finch - A wander through history by street names in London



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Street names reveal all sorts of thing... Love Lane, for instance, might be a former red-light district.

Heneage Place/HeneageLane and Heneage Street memeorialise two different people, (1) a former Tudor politician, and (2) 19th-century daughter of the Earl of Winchelsea

Heneage Place and Lane refer to the former Palace of the Abbot of Bury St Edmonds, which was given to courtier Sir Thomas Heneage when the monasteries were dissolved (it was on the edge of Holy Trinity Priory)

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Thomas Heneage  (1)

Nearby Heneage Street was developed in the georgian period "Between 1799 and 1819, in land known formerly as ’Girle's Ground’ "  Heneage Street (presumably named after Heneage Finch, daughter of the eighth Earl of Winchilsea, who became the second wife of Sir George Osborn), George Street (now Casson Street), John Street (now Spelman Street) and a portion of Chicksand Street. Portions of these streets and a short cul-de-sac called Ramar Place have now been absorbed into the Chicksand estate" 'Mile End New Town', Survey of London: volume 27: Spitalfields and Mile End New Town (1957), pp. 265-288. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=50179 Date accessed: 31 July 2014.

Heneage Finch is a name that has gone down through history from Heneage Finch (1580–1631) MP for the City of London and Speaker of the House of Commons









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Heneage Ln, London EC3A 5DQ, UK
Heneage St, Stepney E1 5LJ, UK
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