The foundation stone of the former
Cripplegate Institute (now offices) on the west side was laid by the Duke of York (later King George V) in 1894. It operated as a library and a theatre and taught students of drama, opera, and secretarial subjects. It is listed grade II by Historical England. The earliest
gaslight street lighting in London was of Golden Lane, the Barbican, and the Golden Lane Brewery in 1807 by the National Light and Heat Company.
Genuine Beer Brewery ) Starting out owned by Gideon Combrune, with a purchase of a steam engine in May 1792, the Combrune's Brewhouse on Golden Lane was producing 18,000 barrels of ale by 1800. William Brown and Joseph Parry bought the brewery in 1804 and renamed it the
Genuine Beer Brewery, with a publicity campaign promising discount pricing on
porter and with the pun motto
Pro Bono Publico. Their intent was to be
disruptive using
economies of scale and to break the monopolistic cartel of the London porter brewers of the time which had increased the wholesale price of porter to 55/- (£) per barrel in two price rises over 1803 and 1804. The brewery was enlarged and refurbished, with a steam engine from
Boulton & Watt and a porter brewing vat that held . The product was marketed as being unadulterated malt and hops, in comparison to the widespread adulteration of the time, and initial sales from October 1805 to January 1806 were good, with 14,200 barrels sold during the period and a total sale of 57,400 barrels over the first full year (1806) of trading. Yearly sales volume rose to 125,700 barrels in 1807, and 131,600 barrels in 1808, putting the brewery third in London by total sales volume in 1808 behind Meux Reid and Thrale Barclay Perkins. The company ran into excise problems in 1807, when
HM Excise decided that since retailers were selling the beer in units smaller than the company would not qualify for the statutory duty-free "wastage" allowance of 3 barrels in every 36. A court case ensued, which hinged on the way that the company had been initially financed with partnership "shares" being sold to some 600 London publicans to raise Arguing that the publicans were (what would now be called) "silent" or "sleeping" partners, with Brown and Parry the "managing" partners, the Brewery prevailed and saved an estimated per year in excise duty. Another legal problem ensued with the charge this time being that the brewery
was adulterating its beer, with
isinglass, and again the company prevailed in court. In fact, the brewery had arranged for nearby yeast dealer James Butcher to buy up discarded fish skins from fishmongers and dissolve them in stale beer, in search of an alternative to islinglass. The casks which had been seized from the brewery premises were on public display (and smell) at the yard of the Excise Office and Brown was characterized in
Satirist as a businessman with a wide variety of shady schemes afoot. Although, as in the previous case, the company partners suspected the hands of its competitors in the prosecution, in fact the competitors, who had been adulterating their products, shared a common interest with the Golden Lane company in not letting a prosecution for
fining succeed. A witness for the defence at the trial was engineer
William Murdoch, who claimed to have devised this fish-skin process and who had sold it as a
trade secret to a consortium of London brewers, and who testified that it was 'exactly the same thing' as isinglass. The defence argument, supported by the testimony of
Humphry Davy, despite his never done any experiments with the fish-skin process himself or being able to answer any questions about the brewery specifically, was that the fish-skin, like isinglass, was not an additive, because it sunk to the bottom of the vat and precipitated out, and that it should be treated by the government the same as isinglass was. Judge
Archibald Macdonald found for the defence that it was unreasonable to object to innovations in brewery practices that were thanks to advances in the science of chemistry, a decision that would be later reflected in an 1817 change to the law on finings. Rising prices of malt from 77/- (£) per
quarter in 1807 to over 100/- (£) per quarter by 1813 drove up the brewery's wholesale prices, and in combination with the fact that the brewery was unable to raise capital from individual wealthy investors or (unlike its competitors) gain business from publicans by issuing loans to incoming leaseholders, the business fell into a decline. In 1827, the brewery was selling a mere 16,100 barrels per year, down from 45,500 per annum in 1813, and the plant was sold at public auction and the Golden Lane brewery buildings demolished.
City Bunhill burial ground The site of the Golden Lane brewery became the City Bunhill burial ground, a
Nonconformist burial ground used from October 1833 to 1853-08-14 where 18,036 people were buried according to contemporary burial registers. It was still recorded on Ordnance Survey maps of the area in 1873. It was partly excavated in 2006, which exhumed 248 burials from the Lower section of the site, the cheapest of the three sections (alongside Middle and Upper) into which the burial ground had been divided. In 1840, for example, a grave was in the Upper section, 16/- (£) in the Middle section, and 12/- (£) in the Lower section.
Golden Lane Mission The whole lane was considered an excessively populous district in itself, stretching from the Barbican to Old Street, with many small passages in between, was "squalid and dirty" and was "one of the least inviting places to be found in immediate proximity of the City". It housed a large number of
costers, likely due to it being central, having cheap accommodation, and being a good place to trade. It was at the time "a favourite haunt of street-traders, including costers and a number of nondescripts not to be classified", and was described as rife with "sin, squalor, and suffering".
Slum improvement failure Golden Lane by the middle of the 19th century had become a slum, with a large population of poor Irish people, characterized by a police sergeant as a 'bad, ruffianly, thievish place' in the 1860s and by
James Greenwood as the 'slummiest of slums' in his book
In Strange Company in 1874. Improvement of Golden Lane was approved by
Act of Parliament, the "Golden Lane Improvement Act", formally the
City of London (Golden Lane and Petticoat Square, &c.) Improvement Provisional Order Confirmation Act 1877 (40 & 41 Vict. c). However, the scheme fell victim to a corruption scandal in the
Metropolitan Board of Works centring around Board member Joseph Storey. The Board had promised towards the scheme, and Storey and others had speculatively sought to acquire property that the Board intended to purchase. The parish of St Luke's, whose improvements committee Storey chaired, had reacquired property at a profit to its purchasor. The Board was unable to convince Storey to resign, so the Board withdrew its promised contribution, leaving Story and the others unable to pay for the property that they had agreed to buy. ==20th and 21st centuries==