Lamb's Conduit Street

in undefined, United Kingdom



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55 Lamb's Conduit St, London WC1N 3NB, UK
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N51° 31' 19.2" W0° 7' 6.96"   (51.522, -0.1186)
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Lamb's Conduit Street is a street in Bloomsbury in the West End of London. There are many independent traders along the street. The street is named after William Lambe, in recognition of the £1,500 he gave for the rebuilding of the Holborn Conduit in 1564. (According to The London Encyclopaedia, "The conduit was an Elizabethan dam made in one of the tributaries of the Fleet River and restored in 1577 by William Lamb, who also provided 120 pails for poor women".) The remains of the head of the conduit can be seen on the side of a 1950s building on the corner between Lamb's Conduit Street and Long Yard.
Notable buildings include The Lamb public house, and The People's Supermarket food cooperative.
Notable residents include John Lind (1737–1781), the barrister, political activist and pamphleteer; John Haslam (1764–1844), the apothecary, physician and medical writer, known for his work on mental illness; and Henry Revell Reynolds (1745–1811) the physician.
W. B. Yeats (1865–1939) attended seances at 61 Lamb's Conduit Street, circa 1900.Virginia Woolf used the architecture of Lambs Conduit Street to arouse her "historic sense" in the novel Jacob's Room "The bitter eighteenth century rain rushed down the Kennel".

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Lamb's Conduit Street

Address: 55 Lamb's Conduit St, London WC1N 3NB, UK
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