Mary le Port Street, Bristol

Mary le Port Street (also known as St Mary le Port Street, Maryleport Street or Maryport Street) was an important thoroughfare from an early stage in the development of the settlement of Bristol, England, linking the area around St Peters Church and, later, Bristol Castle with the saxon core of the town to the west at High Street, Wine Street, Corn Street and Broad Street.[1] It was heavily damaged by aerial bombing in 1940, and was relegated to an un-named service road and footway in post-war reconstruction of the area.

Mary le Port Street, Bristol
Mary le Port Street after the 24 November 1940 bombing raid, showing the remains of the church from the south east. Other bombed buildings and the tower of All Saints' Church are also visible.
Location within Central Bristol
Maintained byBristol City Council
LocationBristol, England
Postal codeBS1
Coordinates51°27′17″N 2°35′29″W
EastPeter Street
WestHigh Street

Recent versions of the Bristol Local Plan have sought to re-instate this street and some of the surrounding historic street layout, to improve the link between the shopping area of Broadmead and the St Nicholas Market area.[2]

History

Mary le Port Street originated as a pre-conquest hollow way. Archaeological excavations in 1962 to 1963 found evidence of late Saxon activity on either side of this way, and of a timber building from this period. In the 13th century or later the hollow way was filled in and paved, possibly using material derived from the digging out of cellars in the area. [1]

St Mary le Port Church was probably built in Saxon times, and was subsequently enlarged and rebuilt to reach its peak of development in the 15th century.[3]

Writing in the 1920s, Charles Wells described Maryleport St as a place where:

...in the old time all the houses overhung so far that it used to be said opposite neighbours could shake hands out of the window. Most of these houses have now given way to less picturesque, but more convenient buildings, but there are still a few of the old ones left.

Charles Wells, Bristol's History

Wells described the church as being much hidden from view by these old shops, and best viewed from its churchyard behind.[4] The street made an impression on J. B. Priestley when he visited in 1933:

What is especially admirable about Bristol is that it is both old and alive, and not one of your museum pieces, living on tourists and the sale of bogus antiques. It can show you all the crypts and gables and half-timbering you want to see; offers you fantastic little old thoroughfares like Mary-Le-Port Street and Narrow Wine Street; has a fine display of the antique, the historical, the picturesque; but yet has not gone 'quaint' but is a real lively bustling city, earning its living and spending its own money.[5]

J B Piestley, English Journey (1934)

Along with the surrounding ancient streets, Mary le Port Street was bombed on the night of 24 November 1940 and almost completely destroyed.[6]

Post-war reconstruction plans for a new Civic Centre – consisting of an art gallery, museum, hotel and exhibition centre, to be built in the area between St Peter's Church and High Street – came to nothing, and the sites on either side of Mary le Port Street were leased to the Bank of England and the Norwich Union Insurance Company,[7] whose now-derelict buildings still occupy the sites.

Today

Mary le Port Street has disappeared from the map; its carriageway was taken up in October 1963.[8] The ruins of St Mary le Port Church are a scheduled monument,[9] whilst the tower is a listed building.[10]

In 2018, Bristol City Council sought to reinstate this street:

The reinstatement of St Mary-le-Port street as a primary pedestrian axis linking St Nicholas Markets to St Peter's Church is a priority, along with establishing a grain of buildings that will allow for the proper integration of the Church.

Bristol City Council, The City Centre Framework-Old City-character statement and place plan[11]

The site of Mary le Port Street is within the Old City and Queen Square Conservation Area.[12]

gollark: I can ship SHA256 inline (i.e. copypaste into source code) as it's only 3KB to protect against *accidental* tampering, but ECC is a giant 30KB library.
gollark: I should probably deal with this.
gollark: Hmm. Troubling.
gollark: Maybe it should just not require verification if there's no ECC library installed yet? But I feel like that could be exploited.
gollark: Oh, it does, neat.

References

  1. Watts, Lorna; Rahtz, Philip (1985). Mary-le-Port Bristol Excavations 1962/3. City of Bristol Museums and Art Gallery. ISBN 0-900199-26-1.
  2. "Bristol Local Plan – Bristol Central Area Plan". Bristol City Council. Retrieved 27 April 2018.
  3. M Q Smith (1970). The Medieval Churches of Bristol. University of Bristol (Bristol branch of the Historical Association). p. 4.
  4. Charles Wells (1969). Bristol's History. Reece Winstone. p. 27. ISBN 0 900814 29 2.
  5. Priestley, J.B. (1934). "To Bristol and Swindon". English Journey. Heinemann.
  6. Besley, James; Reid, Helen (1990). "2 Living Through the Blitz". West at War. Redcliffe Press Limited. ISBN 0 948 265 64 7.
  7. Priest, Gordon; Cobb, Pamela (1980). "Open Spaces". The Fight for Bristol. Bristol Civic Society and The Redcliffe Press.
  8. Winstone, John (1990). Bristol as it Was 1963–1975. Reece Winstone. p. 17. ISBN 0 900814 70 5.
  9. Historic England. "St Mary-le-Port Church (1021385)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  10. Historic England. "Tower of Church of St Mary-le-Port (1208338)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  11. "The City Centre Framework – Old City – character statement and place plan" (PDF). Bristol City Council City Design Group. 2018. p. 4-6. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
  12. "Conservation Area No.4 – City and Queen Square – Character Appraisal" (PDF). Bristol City Council. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.