Whiteladies Road
Coordinates: 51°27′32″N 2°36′54″W / 51.459°N 2.615°W Whiteladies Road is a main road in Bristol, England. It runs north from the Victoria Rooms to Durdham Down, and separates Clifton on the west side from Redland and Cotham on the east. It forms part of the A4018.
Significant buildings on Whiteladies Road include (from south to north):
- Broadcasting House (Bristol), offices and studios of the British Broadcasting Corporation;
- the Whiteladies Picture House;
- Clifton Down railway station.
A shopping centre has been built around Clifton Down station, and to the north of the station Whiteladies Road has long been an important shopping area.
The upper part of the road is commonly known as Blackboy Hill, named after the Black Boy Inn which stood on the hill until 1874.[1] "Black Boy" was a common name for pubs after the Restoration. Charles II was commonly known as "the black boy" due to his black hair[2] and the pub sign on Blackboy Hill had, until very recently, a portrait of Charles II on it.
The origin of the name of Whiteladies Road appears to be a pub, known as the White Ladies Inn, shown on maps in 1746[3] and 1804.[4] There is a popular belief in Bristol that the naming of both Whiteladies Road and Blackboy Hill had connections with the slave trade, but this is probably urban myth. Both names appear to be derived from pubs. A map of 1826 shows a house called White Ladies, and the road at least as far as Whiteladies Gate (near the present site of Clifton Down station) had been given its name by that time.[5] At that time the road north of Whiteladies Gate was a turnpike leading to New Passage.[6]
References
- ↑ Winstone, R. (1966). Bristol As It Was 1874–1866. p. Photos 82 and 83.
- ↑ Fraser, Antonia (1979). King Charles II. p. 9.
- ↑ G. H. Hammersley, 'Survey of the Manor of Clifton', reproduced in Clifton and Durdham Down: A Landscape History, p. 6, Plan 2.
- ↑ Smith, V. (2002), Street Names of Bristol, Broadcast Books, ISBN 1-874092-90-7.
- ↑ Map reproduced in Parker, G. (1929), ‘Tyndall's Park, Bristol, Fort Royal and the Fort House Therein’, in Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, vol. 51.
- ↑ Tombs, R. C. (1905), The King's Post on Project Gutenberg.
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