Geography The originally Roman A11 Road, once known as the
Great Essex Road, is known as Aldgate High Street as it passes through the Portsoken Ward, and the use of Aldgate as a place name typically applies to this extramural area around Aldgate High Street. The High Street is around 290 metres (950 feet) long. Due to the road geography, and its historic interest, the
Aldgate Pump, a few metres inside the position of the former gate is also usually included. Immediately east of Aldgate High Street the road becomes known as
Whitechapel High Street as it enters the
Whitechapel area of the
London Borough of Tower Hamlets. The stretch of Whitechapel High Street extending as far as
Gardiners Corner, and including
Aldgate East tube station is also occasionally referred to as part of Aldgate.
History The church of
St Botolph's Aldgate stands just outside the position of the former gate, and was in place by 1115, though some traditions suggest an earlier origin. In about 1420 the
Whitechapel Bell Foundry was founded in Aldgate, but it later moved to nearby
Whitechapel. The foundry continued to supply bells to churches in the city, including the rebuilt church of
St Botolph without Aldgate in 1744. During the late 16th-century, an immigrant from
Antwerp named Jacob Jansen (d. 1593) established a pottery producing
English Delftware at Aldgate. A Jewish community developed in the area after
Oliver Cromwell invited the Jews to return to England. They established London's oldest synagogue at
Bevis Marks in 1698, In 1773
Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral by
Phillis Wheatley, the first book by an
African American was published in Aldgate after her owners could not find a publisher in
Boston, Massachusetts.
Daniel Mendoza was born in 1764 to a Jewish family in Aldgate. He was author of
The Art of Boxing and became an English
boxing champion from 1792 to 1795.
Aldgate Pump , at the junction of Aldgate,
Leadenhall Street and
Fenchurch Street From 1700 distances into
Essex and
Middlesex were measured from Aldgate Pump. The original pump was taken down in 1876, and a "faux" pump and drinking fountain was erected several yards to the west of the original; it was supplied by water from the
New River. In ancient deeds,
Alegate Well is mentioned, adjoining the City wall, and this may have been the source (of water) for the original pump. A section of the remains of Holy Trinity Priory can be seen through a window in a nearby office block, on the north side.
Aldgate Square In the 1970s, the historic street pattern in central Aldgate was altered to form one large traffic gyratory at the junction which included Whitechapel High Street and Commercial Road. This was followed by office development on the traffic island at the centre, and a network of underground subways was constructed to provide pedestrian access beneath the one-way system and to provide a link to the
London Underground stations. This led to parts of Aldgate being protected in the Whitechapel High Street Conservation Area and there are numerous listed buildings. Aldgate Square, a new public square sited between two heritage listed buildings,
The Aldgate School and the church of
St Botolph without Aldgate, was opened on 15 June 2018 by the Lord Mayor of the City of London. The cafe on the square, Portsoken Pavilion (named after the extramural
Portsoken ward), was designed by Make, architects of the award-winning Visitor Information Centre at
St Paul's Cathedral. The alignment of the former
London Wall, and with it the start of the East End of London, is prominently marked by a course of paving on the western side of the square.
Public artworks Notable sculptures in Aldgate are the bronze abstract "Ridirich" (1980) by
Keith McCarter in the Square between Little Somerset Street and the bus garage on Aldgate High Street; "Sanctuary" (1985) outside the church of St Botolph without Aldgate made of fibreglass by
Naomi Blake; "The Spitalfields Column" (1995) cast in bronze by Richard Perry marking the entrance to Petticoat Lane Market at the southern end of Middlesex Street; six hurtling bronze horses (2015) by
Hamish Mackie in the piazza at Goodman's Fields.
Archaeological finds In 2013 in Minories, Aldgate – on the last day of excavations – archaeologists found a 1,900-year-old Roman sculpture from the late 1st or early 2nd century AD in what was Roman London's "Eastern Cemetery". "The Minories Eagle", hailed by experts as one of the rarest and finest artefacts ever unearthed in Britain would have stood in a niche in a mausoleum above the tomb of a very powerful and wealthy man. Carved in Cotswold
oolitic stone and rich in iconography it shows an exquisitely carved and outstandingly preserved eagle with a serpent in its beak. It was exhibited at the
Museum of London in October 2013. ==Ward of Aldgate==