Home  >  Volume II  >  Page Group i - 19  >  
Previous page London and its Environs Described, Volume II (1761) Next page

This page concludes the article entitled Brewers Hall, which started on Page 3.
It is followed by the article entitled Brewer's green, on this page.
4B R I
paved with free stone, and is supported
by handsome pillars.
BREWER'S green, Tothill side.Click to show Key popup
BREWER'S key, Thames street, the next
key to Tower hill.Click to show Key popup
BREWER'S lane,  1. Dowgate Hill.  2. Shad-
well market.  3. Wapping.
BREWER'S rents, Whitechapel.
BREWER'S street,  1. Bow street, St. Giles's.
2. Old Soho.
BREWER'S yard,  1. Barnaby street.  2. Cow
Cross.  3. Giltspur street.  4. Holiwell lane.
5. By Hungerford market.  6. King
street, Westminster.  7. Saffron hill.  8.
Shoe lane.  9. Windmill court, Pye
corner.
BREWHOUSE lane,  1. Salisbury court, Fleet
street.  2. Wapping.
BREWHOUSE yard,  1. Battle bridge.  2.
Fox lane.  3. At the Hermitage.  4. Lea-
ther lane.  5. Saffron hill.  6. St. Catha-
rine's.  7. Turnmill street.  8. Wapping.
9. Whitechapel.  10. White's ground,
Crucifix lane.
BRIANT court, Briant street.Click to show Key popup
BRIANT street, Shoreditch.Click to show Key popup
BRIANT'S alley, Shoreditch.Click to show Key popup
BRICKBUILDINGS court, Snow hill.
BRICK court,  1. Brick lane, Old street.  2.
College street, Westminster.  3. Middle
Temple.  4. Sheer lane.
BRICKHILL
B R I5
BRICKHILL lane, Thames street.
BRICK lane,  1. Old street.  2. Spitalfields.
3. Whitechapel: this was formerly a
deep dirty road, frequented chiefly by
carts fetching bricks that way into
Whitechapel, from brick kilns in Spi-
talfields.
BRICK street,  1. Hyde Park road.  2. Ty-
burn lane.
BRICK yard, Brick lane, Spitalfields.
BRICKLAYERS yard, Millbank.
BRICKLAYERS court, Coleman street,
Lothbury.
BRIDE'S alley, Fleet street, so called from
St. Bride's, or St. Bridget's church.
BRIDE court, by St. Bride's church, Fleet
street.
BRIDE lane,  1.By St. Bride's church, Fleet
street.  2. Little Peter street.
St. BRIDE'S, or rather St. Bridget's church,
is obscurely situated behind the houses on
the south side of Fleet street.  It has been
always dedicated to St. Bridget, but the
curious are unable to discover who this
saint was.  The old church was destroy-
ed by the fire of London, and the pre-
sent edifice was erected within fourteen
years after.  This church, which is supe-
rior to most of our parish churches in
delicacy and true beauty, is 111 feet

B 3long,