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St Anne's Court

Coordinates: 51°30′52″N 0°08′02″W / 51.5144°N 0.1339°W / 51.5144; -0.1339
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St Anne's Court in the early 1960s

St Anne's Court is an alleyway that connects Dean Street and Wardour Street in London's Soho district. Parts of it can be dated back to the late 17th century.[1]

Sites in St Anne's Court included the "model lodgings" designed by William Burges in 1864-66 for the banker and philanthropist Lackland Mackintosh Rate,[2] for whom Burges subsequently work at Milton Court, Dorking, Surrey. At St Anne's, Rate wanted a commercial rental property. The result was a series of thirty lodging rooms to be let to artisans. The building was of brick with cast-iron piers. Crook describes the result as "Burges's favourite 13th-century French, pared to the bone."[2] The building has subsequently been demolished.

Sites also include the former Trident Studios and the 1970s science fiction bookshop Dark They Were, and Golden-Eyed. In the 1980s, a basement in St Anne's Court was home to Shades Records, a store specialising in extreme forms of Heavy Metal such as "Death Metal" and "Thrash Metal". As the only such store in the country, it played a particularly important role in the growth of those music genres in the UK.[3]

See also

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  • Meard Street, a nearby pedestrianized street parallel to St Anne's Court, of similar antiquity

Notes

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  1. ^ "Dean Street Area: Portland Estate, St. Anne's Court, eastern range - British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b Crook 1981a, p. "240"
  3. ^ Story, Every Record Tells A. (9 April 2012). "Shades Records – The Greatest Record Store There Ever Was: A Tribute for Record Store Day". Retrieved 21 April 2019.

References

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51°30′52″N 0°08′02″W / 51.5144°N 0.1339°W / 51.5144; -0.1339