Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Cloth Fair

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Type
  
Residential street

Northeast end
  
Middle Street

Length
  
137 m

Southwest end
  
Little Britain

Known for
  
Medieval cloth market

Major cities
  
London

Cloth Fair

Cloth fair cottage at rawcliffe house farm


Cloth Fair is a street in the City of London where, in medieval times, merchants gathered to buy and sell material during the Bartholomew Fair. Today, it is a short residential street to the east of Smithfield in the north-western part of the City and is located in the ward of Farringdon Within.

Contents

Map of Cloth Fair, London EC1A 7JQ, UK

The street runs southwest to northeast from Little Britain, the very start of the A1 road, the country's longest named road, parallel to Long Lane to the north and bordered by the Anglican church of St. Bartholomew-the-Great to the south, until it merges with Middle Street some 150 yards later.

The street was originally within the precincts of the Priory of St. Bartholomew's, and until 1910 formed a separate liberty, with gates that were shut at night. Such a small area could not meet the demands of installing street lighting and sewers, and rejoined the City. The area has a rich history, a colourful past and proud literary tradition. It contains within its boundaries the oldest residential dwelling in London (numbers 41 and 42), a pair of properties administered by the Landmark Trust, one of them the former home of English poet John Betjeman, who gave his name to a restaurant on the ground floor.

The nearest London Underground station is Barbican (Circle, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines) and the closest mainline railway station is Farringdon.

Cloth fair by mr phill


References

Cloth Fair Wikipedia