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St Andrew Holborn (parish)

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Status
  
Civil parish

Date dissolved
  
1907

St Andrew Holborn (parish)

St Andrew Holborn was an ancient English parish that until 1767 was partly within the City of London and partly in the county of Middlesex.

Contents

History

In 1723 part of the Middlesex section of the parish became St George the Martyr. This was recombined with the remaining Middlesex portion of St Andrew Holborn in 1767 to create St Andrew Holborn Above the Bars with St George the Martyr. The remaining parish in the City of London was also known as St Andrew Holborn Below the Bars. It was abolished as a civil parish in 1907.

Geography

The ancient parish included most of the Holborn area to the west, bordering onto St Giles in the Fields. As such it included both Lincoln's Inn and Gray's Inn which rented pews in the church of St Andrew, Holborn. Thavie's original property, which was left for his endowment of the church, Thavie's Inn became a lawyers inn and may have been the original home of Lincoln's Inn before it relocated to its present site. Lincoln's sold Thavies Inn for redevelopment in 1785.

Population

St Andrew Holborn, City of London

References

St Andrew Holborn (parish) Wikipedia


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