Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Black Mary's Hole

I decide to go back into Black Mary’s Hole to take some photos. I enter from Grays Inn Road via Elm Street and discover that the ominous looking block sprouting military sized satellite dishes on the roof is in fact the offices of the Serious Fraud Squad (a building they appear to share with ITN). The offices are illuminated by strip lights, a swivel chair turned to face the window with a bulging folder sat half open. I wonder if this is the infamous George Galloway file.

Luckily the basement office stacked high with old IT gear belongs to the neighbouring building. Two fellas are sat there feet up. I move along a little down Gough Street, flash off, too far away to get a good picture. It’s freezing. A guy walks down the middle of the street with two dogs. This is a desolate dark lane. The office that I snap has a semi-deserted carpark beneath – a skip full of broken office furniture. It doesn’t take a wild leap of the imagination to see the murder of John Etheridge that took place here in 1766. Etheridge was driving cattle through the area and one of his bullocks strayed into a field belonging to William Floyd. Thomas Plymmer came out of the smith’s shop, struck him once on the nose, he collapsed and died.

From the top of Phoenix Place I look out over the lights of the huge carpark that house the post office vans of the Mount Pleasant sorting office. My great aunts Edie and Ethel worked here when they returned from South Africa in the 1920’s. The tower blocks on St John’s Street Goswell Road shimmer in the background, roughly on the spot of the old madhouse, the historic symmetry is instructive.


This dark pit between Calthorpe Street, Kings Cross Road, Farringdon Road, Grays Inn and down to Clerkenwell Road keeps drawing me in, night and day. It retains a medieval feel, even after William Floyd’s fields have given way to a roughly surfaced carpark and the sorting office has been dropped on Sir John Oldcastle’s orchard. C20th street lighting fails to illuminate the damp blackness that rises from the Fleet beneath the pavement. Alleys and lanes proliferate. There is an absence of people on the street after dark, you earn your passage through here and it stays with you.


The scene in Muratori on Kings Cross Road is one to catch. Faces alive. The waitress has the floor, animated, arms waving, she’s holding court, all the blokes in post office drag having their hearty dinners laughing. It’s like an Edward Hopper painting injected with mirth.

This morning, going up Mount Pleasant the covers start to come off the back of the infamous Grays Inn Buildings. It’s starting to look like just another block of luxury flats, a long way from it’s days as a notorious den of drugs and anarchists.

3 comments:

Disgruntled victim of botched justice said...

That's not murder, man! Surely its a case of manslaughter. Now that little incident down Colindeep Lane in 1607, the one where the two haymakers lumped their boss, I think we can safely conclude it was murder pure and simple. I'm sure you agree.

N. Papadimitriou said...

Weren't there pleasure gardens thereabouts? I seem to recall HP Clunn, in his classic maniacal tour of London saying some such thing. Nice work John! We love you, here at Middlesex County Council.

John said...

There were indeed Nick. One version of the name 'Black Mary's Hole' comes from the story that a black lady called Mary dispensed healing water from a well here. The other version being that it derived from a well in the grounds of a convent of the Blessed Virgin Mary. St. Chad's well was just over the road (of Nell Gwynn fame) and of course there was Sadler's Wells and New Tunbridge Wells. I'll write up something on this soon, I've got a great book on the old wells and springs of London.
The HP Clunn book, would that be 'The Face of London', is it any good?