and Horsemonger Lane Gaol
c.1833 The gaol was built to replace the old county gaol housed at what had been the nearby 'White Lion Inn' on Borough High Street, Southwark (informally called the 'Borough Gaol'). The new building was designed by
George Gwilt the Elder,
surveyor to the county of
Surrey, and completed in 1799. Horsemonger Lane remained Surrey’s principal prison and place of
execution up to its closure in 1878. It was a common gaol, housing both
debtors and
criminals, with a capacity of around 300 inmates. In total, 131 men and four women were executed there between 1800 and 1877, the
gallows being erected on the flat roof of the prison's gatehouse until abolition of public executions in 1868, and then in a yard behind the walls. By 1859, the gaol was no longer known as 'Horsemonger Lane' following the road's change of name to Union Road (today: Harper Road), being renamed Surrey County Gaol (although its alternative name, the New Gaol, should not be confused with the
New Prison, located north of the
River Thames in
Clerkenwell). The gaol was demolished in 1881 and replaced by the
Inner London Crown Court, and a public park,
Newington Gardens, which opened in 1884. ==Literary connections==