Origins The broad street connecting
Pall Mall with
Piccadilly is recorded in the
Elizabethan era and, as the name suggests, was chiefly used as a
street market for the sale of
fodder and other farm produce. At that time, it was a rural spot, with the village of
Charing the closest settlement. This practice continued to the reign of
William III; by that time, carts carrying hay and straw were allowed in the street to trade, toll-free. In 1692, when the street was paved, a tax was levied on the loads: 3
d for a load of hay and 2d for one of straw. In 1830, the market was moved by Act of Parliament to
Cumberland Market near
Regent's Park. In earlier centuries, the Haymarket was also one of the centres of prostitution in London, but this is no longer the case.
Old and New London informs us, in 1878: Situated in the centre of the pleasure-going Westend population, the Haymarket is a great place for hotels, supper-houses, and foreign cafés; and it need hardly be added here, that so many of its taverns became the resort of the loosest characters, after the closing of the theatres, who turned night into day, and who were so constantly appearing before the sitting magistrates in consequence of drunken riots and street rows, that the Legislature interfered, and an Act of Parliament was passed, compelling the closing of such houses of refreshment at twelve o'clock.
Theatres It is part of
London's theatre district, the
West End, and has been a theatrical location at least since the 17th century. The Queen's Theatre in the Haymarket, designed by
John Vanbrugh, opened in 1705 on the site of what is now
His Majesty's Theatre. It was intended for drama, but the acoustics turned out to be more suitable for opera, and from 1710 to 1745, most operas and some oratorios of
George Frederick Handel were premièred at this theatre, which was renamed the King's Theatre at the death of
Queen Anne in 1714. After Vanbrugh's building had been destroyed by fire in 1790, another King's Theatre on the same site followed. After another fire, Her Majesty's Theatre was opened there in 1897. This building, the fourth on the same site, is still in use for major musical productions. Its title changes with the sex of the monarch: it became His Majesty's Theatre in 1902 following the death of
Queen Victoria, Her Majesty's Theatre in 1952 when
Elizabeth II succeeded her father, and, after the death of Elizabeth II in 2022, has reverted to His Majesty's Theatre. Today's
Theatre Royal at another site in the Haymarket is a building originally designed by
John Nash (1820), replacing a previous theatre of the 1720s. ==Haymarket today==