Agar Town
{{Short description|Short-lived area of St Pancras in central London}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2020}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2015}}
File:Agar Town 1851.jpg and Pentonville.]]
File:Paradise Row Agar Town.jpg
Agar Town (also known as Ague Town, Hagar Town, Agar-Town and Agar-town) was a small, historically poor neighbourhood of St Pancras in central London. Most of the area was demolished making way for St Pancras railway station.
History
The area was named after William Agar, a wealthy lawyer who lived at Elm Lodge, a villa in large grounds near to the Regent's Canal roughly where Barker Drive stands. Key streets were Canterbury Place, Durham Street, and one of the city's Oxford Crescents.{{cite news|author1=Tom Bolton|title=From Cripplegate to Agar Town: inside London's vanished neighbourhoods|url=https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2015/jun/24/london-vanished-neighbourhoods-cripplegate-agar-town-limehouse-chinatown|accessdate=24 June 2015|work=The Guardian|date=24 June 2015|quote=The local vestry failed to provide "Ague Town", as it became known, with street lighting or cleaning, there was no sewerage, and it quickly became synonymous with mud and disease.}} The area contained low-quality housing for the poor and labourers building the houses, made of the lowest quality materials on 21-year leases, with no street lighting, cleaning or sewerage. Consequently, Agar Town was generally considered a slum. This designation has been questioned.Denford, Steven L J (1995) Agar Town: The life and death of a Victorian "slum". Camden History Society, London. [http://www.camdenhistorysociety.org Camden History Society website]
The neighbourhood was started in 1841 with Agar's widow leasing out small plots on the north side of the canal. Ownership passed to the Church Commissioners, who sold it to the Midland Railway. The company demolished most of the housing to make way for warehouses supplying St Pancras railway station from 1866.
The Church of St Thomas was built in 1864, just as development of the railway was already underway, and demolished in 1953.[https://andrewpink.org/agar/ "St Thomas, Agar Town: gone but not quite forgotten ..." Andrewpink.org]
The name of Agar Town is commemorated by Agar Grove which traces an edge and which was St Paul's Road in Camden Town. Residential building occurred in the 1960s, including the tower block "Lulworth House".[https://hidden-london.com/gazetteer/agar-town/ "Agar Town, Camden - Hidden London" Hiddenlondon.com] In recent years, there has been further redevelopment.
The oldest remaining building of Agar Town is The Constitution public house.[https://web.archive.org/web/20181206210649/https://www.conincamden.co.uk/ "The Constitution" Conincamden.co.uk]
Cultural reference
The folk song The River Don't Run by Nick Hart describes the demolition of Agar Town and the disappearance of part of the River Fleet as it was diverted underground to make way for railway.[https://www.folkradio.co.uk/2017/11/nick-hart-sings-eight-english-folk-songs/ "Nick Hart: Sings Eight English Folk Songs" Folkradio co.uk]
See also
References
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External links
- {{Commons category-inline}}
- [http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/22539/1/0906Swensen.pdf Mapping Poverty in Agar Town: Economic Conditions Prior to the Development of St. Pancras Station In 1866]
- [http://www.aim25.ac.uk/cgi-bin/vcdf/detail?coll_id=15581&inst_id=118&nv1=search&nv2= Saint Thomas, Agar Town: Camden]
- [http://hidden-london.com/gazetteer/agar-town/ "Agar Town, Camden" on hidden-london.com]
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