Demolition of Lyons Inn, Strand, [London], 1862. A piece of old London - a long-neglected, out-of-the-way nook and corner - has disappeared, after having been threatened with destruction for nearly half a century. This old, degenerate place had, however, been a spot of note - one of the nurseries of our great lawyers - an Inn of Chancery, attached to the parent inn, the Inner Temple...On the north side of the street the oldest portion of Lyons Inn remained, and here was the original entrance, blocked up many years since. It had a pair of boldly-sculptured lions heads: opposite is...a corner-post carved with a lions head and paws, serving as a corbel to support a very old house; this court being the entrance to Lyons Inn from the Strand...after the blocking up of the original entrance, that in Newcastle-street remained the only gate..."Lyons Inn was a guest inn or hostelry, held at the sign of the Lyon, and purchased by gentlemen, professors, and students in the law in the raigne of King Henry the Eighth, and converted to an Inn of Chancery."...The View...shows the north, south, and west sides of the Inn, with the east end of the Hall, in course of removal, to form the site of projected hotel buildings upon an extensive scale. From "Illustrated London News", 1862.
px | px | dpi | = | cm | x | cm | = | MB |
Details
Creative#:
TOP29737831
Source:
達志影像
Authorization Type:
RM
Release Information:
須由TPG 完整授權
Model Release:
Not Required
Property Release:
Not Required
Right to Privacy:
No
Same folder images: