Whitecross Street formerly continued further south from its current southern end, to just outside
Cripplegate, a gate of the
London Wall surrounding the
City of London. In his 1720 work,
A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster,
John Strype wrote: In Whitecross street, King Henry V. builded one fair House; and founded there a Brotherhood of St. Giles, to be kept. Which House, had sometime been an Hospital of the French Order, by the Name of St. Giles without Cripplegate, in the Reign of Edward I. The King having the Jurisdiction, and appointing a Custos thereof, for the Precinct of St. Giles, &c. Which Hospital being suppressed, the Lands were given to the Brotherhood, for the relief of the Poor. In this Street was a White cross; and near it was built an Arch of Stone, under which ran a Course of Water down to the Moor, called now Moorfields." The Fortune Playhouse, an early Elizabethan theatre, was built on the street c.1600.
John Lambe was killed in 1628 at this theatre. It was closed in 1642 as part of Parliament's closure of all theatres. A debtors' prison, Whitecross Street Prison, was built on the street in 1813–15, near Fore Street (which still exists). After the prison's closure in 1870, the
Midland Railway Company built a goods terminus and a booking office for goods and passengers on the site in 1876–77. In between 1876 and 1906 the
Cripplegate Bank was located at 31 and then 1 Whitecross Street, before been incorporated into the
Union Bank of London. The Cripplegate area was heavily damaged during
World War II. When the
Barbican Estate and
Barbican Centre were reconstructed after the war, the section of Whitecross Street south of Silk Street was swallowed up by the new construction. The short section between Silk Street and Chiswell Street/Beech Street became part of
Silk Street.
St Giles Cripplegate, mentioned by Strype, is now within the Barbican Estate. ==Whitecross Street Market==