Seven Dials, London

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File:Seven Dials-1549.JPG
Seven Dials, view towards Monmouth Street, Shorts Gardens and Earlham Street; note the competing clocks.
File:SevenDials.jpg
Seven Dials sundial pillar: Earlham Street and Mercer Street

Seven Dials is a small road junction in Covent Garden in the West End of London where seven streets converge. At the centre of the roughly circular space is a pillar bearing six sundials, a result of the pillar being commissioned before a late stage alteration of the plans from an original six roads.

The term also refers informally to the immediate surrounding area.

History

The landed estate formally belonged to the Worshipful Company of Mercers which allowed building licences on what was open farmland to maximise their income in what was the burgeoning West End of the developing metropolitan area. The original layout of the Seven Dials area was designed by Thomas Neale in the early 1690s. The original plan had six roads converging, although this was later increased to seven. The sundial pillar was built with only six faces, with the dial itself acting as the seventh. This number of roads was chosen in order to maximise the number of houses that could be built on the site.

Following the successful development of the fashionable Covent Garden Piazza area nearby, Neale aimed for the Seven Dials site to be popular with well-off residents. This was not to be, however, and the area gradually deteriorated. At one stage, each of the seven apexes facing the column housed a pub. By the nineteenth century, Seven Dials had become one of the most notorious slums in London, being part of the rookery of St Giles. The area was described by Charles Dickens in his collection Sketches by Boz, which includes the quote:<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

The stranger who finds himself in the Dials for the first time...at the entrance of Seven obscure passages, uncertain which to take, will see enough around him to keep his curiosity awake for no inconsiderable time...

The relatively down-market status of this location is also epitomised by W. S. Gilbert in these lines from Iolanthe<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

Hearts just as pure and fair
May beat in Belgrave Square
As in the lowly air of Seven Dials.

It was still a byword for urban poverty in the early twentieth century, when Agatha Christie set The Seven Dials Mystery (1929) there.

The original sundial column was removed in 1773. It had been believed that this was due to being pulled down by an angry mob, although recent research suggests that it was deliberately removed by the Paving Commissioners in an attempt to rid the area of "undesirables". The remains were acquired by architect James Paine, who kept them at his house in Addlestone, Surrey. In 1820, the remains were purchased by public subscription and re-erected in nearby Weybridge, as a memorial to Princess Frederica Charlotte of Prussia, Duchess of York and Albany.

In the 1840s Seven Dials was a focal point for the Chartists in their campaign for electoral reform. However, the intended uprisings there were thwarted by police infiltrators.[1]

Seven Dials today

Today, Seven Dials is a prosperous, largely commercial, neighbourhood in the WC2 postcode area between the West End theatre district of Shaftesbury Avenue and the fashion-focused shopping district in and around nearby Neal's Yard. The space is dominated by traffic, generally slow-moving in these narrow streets which are usually crowded with people.

On one of the seven apexes of the junction is a pub, The Crown; on another apex is Cambridge Theatre, and on a third the Radisson Edwardian Mercer Street Hotel. Despite some redevelopment, many of the original buildings remain.

The replacement sundial column was constructed in 1988/89, to the original design. It was unveiled by Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, during her visit to commemorate the tercentenary of the reign of William and Mary, during which the area was developed.

In popular culture

Property development

Seven Dials is predominantly owned by Shaftesbury PLC who also have a joint venture with the Worshipful Company of Mercers at the adjoining St Martin's Courtyard.[5]

References

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  2. British Library Main Catalogue. Retrieved 21 April 2015.
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External links

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