Wheeler Gate, Nottingham

Wheeler Gate is a street in Nottingham City Centre between Old Market Square and St Peter’s Square.[1]

Wheeler Gate
Wheeler Gate
Location within Central Nottingham
Maintained byNottingham City Council
Coordinates52.9525°N 1.1501°W / 52.9525; -1.1501

History

Nottingham Corporation Tramways car 66 descending Wheeler Gate, ca. 1910

In 1313 the street is referred to as Baxter Gate[2] but shortly afterwards became known as Wheeler Gate, or Wheel Wright Gate, as the location of the wheel makers.

It was 25 feet (7.6 m) wide at its narrowest point just below the Reindeer Inn, so the Town Council under took a project to widen it in 1885 to a uniform 60 feet (18 m)[3] with the buildings on the eastern side being completely replaced. The roadway was 40 feet (12 m) wide with pavements on each side of 10 feet (3.0 m) width.

In 1900, the conversion of the horse drawn tramway to electric power and extensions to the system built by the Nottingham Corporation Tramways included a double track route from St Peter’s Square along Wheeler Gate to join other tram lines in the Market Square.[4]

Notable buildings

North east side

  • 1, 3 and 5, Cavendish Buildings by John Howitt 1894. Grade II listed.[5]
  • 9 to 23 Premier House by John Howitt ca. 1900 Grade II listed.[6]
  • 25 to 29 by Robert Evans for E. Swann Grade II listed.[7] (Sisson and Parker’s bookshop, Sainsbury in 2017)

South west side

Pearl Assurance house by Evans, Cartwright and Woollatt 1960-62
gollark: Imagine not just procedurally generating new genders on demand.
gollark: If you dislike it, make TSPUMUAI or something.
gollark: It approximates them to fractions.
gollark: Unlike existing indentation schemes it gracefully handles fractional indents and uses a mix of spaces and tabs to avoid debates.
gollark: (Stochastic Polynomial Unicode-Aware Multicharacter Automatic Indentation)

References

  1. Harwood, Elain (2008). Pevsner Architectural Guides. Yale University Press. p. 95. ISBN 9780300126662.
  2. Holland Walker, John (1934). "An itinerary of Nottingham". Transactions of the Thoroton Society. 38.
  3. "The Improvement of Wheeler Gate". Nottingham Evening Post. England. 25 August 1885. Retrieved 22 April 2018 via British Newspaper Archive.
  4. Marshall, Roy (1960). A history of Nottingham City Transport, 1897-1959. Nottingham City Transport.
  5. Historic England, "Cavendish Buildings (1255257)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 April 2017
  6. Historic England, "Premier House (1255258)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 April 2017
  7. Historic England, "25, 27 and 29, Wheeler Gate (1255260)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 April 2017
  8. Historic England, "Eldon Chamber (1255259)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 22 April 2017
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.