Difference between revisions of "Fitzrovia"

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'''Fitzrovia''' is an area in central London, to the north of [[Soho]]. It is partly in [[Camden]] and partly in the [[City of Westminster]]. The area is roughly bounded by Oxford Street, Gower Street, Euston Road and Great Portland Street. It takes its name from the [[Fitzroy Tavern]] in Charlotte Street. The name Fitzrovia appears to have appeared first in print in [[Tom Driberg]]'s  ''William Hickey'' gossip column in the ''Daily Express'' in 1940.<ref>ttp://www.literarylondon.org/london-journal/march2006/goulding.html Simon W Goulding, "Fitzrovian Nights" in ''Literary London''</ref>
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'''Fitzrovia''' is an area in central London, to the north of [[Soho]]. It is partly in [[Camden]] and partly in the [[City of Westminster]]. The area is roughly bounded by Oxford Street, Gower Street, Euston Road and Great Portland Street. It takes its name from the [[Fitzroy Tavern]] in Charlotte Street. The name Fitzrovia appears to have appeared first in print in [[Tom Driberg]]'s  ''William Hickey'' gossip column in the ''Daily Express'' in 1940.<ref>http://www.literarylondon.org/london-journal/march2006/goulding.html Simon W Goulding, "Fitzrovian Nights" in ''Literary London''</ref>
  
 
The most prominent landmark of the area (literally) is the BT Tower.
 
The most prominent landmark of the area (literally) is the BT Tower.

Revision as of 18:49, 9 May 2013

Fitzrovia is an area in central London, to the north of Soho. It is partly in Camden and partly in the City of Westminster. The area is roughly bounded by Oxford Street, Gower Street, Euston Road and Great Portland Street. It takes its name from the Fitzroy Tavern in Charlotte Street. The name Fitzrovia appears to have appeared first in print in Tom Driberg's William Hickey gossip column in the Daily Express in 1940.[1]

The most prominent landmark of the area (literally) is the BT Tower.

The Cleveland Street scandal, in 1899, featured a local male brothel with aristocratic patrons.

"In Fitzrovia,just north of Oxford Street, there was a cluster of pubs – the Bricklayers Arms, the Wheatsheaf, the Marquis of Granby and the Fitzroy Tavern – which if not quite as queer as the Running Horse or the Cavour in Leicester Square were bohemian enough to accommodate 'the fringe of the gay worlds'."[2]

References

  1. http://www.literarylondon.org/london-journal/march2006/goulding.html Simon W Goulding, "Fitzrovian Nights" in Literary London
  2. Matt Cook and others, A Gay History of Britain, quoting Kevin Porter and Jeffrey Weeks, Between the Acts: Lives of Homosexual Men, 1885–1967