Up until the 16th century, the road and the surrounding region, being near the coast, had many sand ridges. As the sea level rose, it inundated these regions, where several lagoons and ridges were left behind when the sea withdrew. The sandy ridges remained places of safety, where settlements were established. Several valleys ran around the ridges, which rose up to about 12 feet in height. Some of these valleys served as drainage channels. Until the late 18th century, the area on which the present day's road lies remained one such unwanted drainage channel, known then as Atta Pallam. Much of the area was owned by
Stephen Popham, a former British
MP and later the advocate general in
Calcutta, who moved to Madras in 1778. He is credited with establishing a modern police force in the city in 1782. The area where the
General Hospital, Madras United Club and the
Park Town post office stand today was then a hill known locally as Narimedu (literally 'mound of foxes'), which was named 'Hoggs Hill' by the British. When the British considered it as a security threat to
Fort St. George and decided to level the area, Popham negotiated with them to buy the earth removed from the hill to fill the ditch, The thoroughfare thus created came to be known as 'Popham's Broadway'. By the 1890s, the road became known for two food establishments, the first of which was that of P. Venkatachellum, whose condiments and chutneys were popular in England. He is credited with the creation of
mulligatawny soup from the local recipe of
milagu rasam (
milagu thanni). The other restaurant was Harrison's, established in 1891, which today is a contemporary hotel in
Nungambakkam. The road was also home to the city's first private hospital run in the 1900s by physician T. A. Sankaranarayanan, decades before the advent of the
Apollo Hospitals, the country's first modern corporate hospital, established in 1983. ==The present-day road==