Fleet Street in London
has been long associated with newspapers and journalists. But it’s been a long
time since any newspapers were actually located there, since all moved to other
part of the metropolitan area. In the fall of 2017, I walked Fleet Street and
some of the side streets on a cloudy, rainy Sunday, and say only one vestige of
the area’s newspaper past – fading letters on the side of a building. A few
former newspaper buildings have been listed on the historic register and
preserved, but no newspapers operate here today.
The area
includes the Temple, still a part of the legal industry, notable buildings like
St. Dunstan-in-the-West Church, the Samuel Johnson House, the
Royal Courts of Justice at the western end of the street and the Old Bailey
near the eastern end, and many more. On my visit that Sunday, I stopped long
enough to take a photo of a lawyer’s gown and wig for sale at a shop.
To continue reading, please see my post today at Dancing Priest.
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