Geoff Browell
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Eileen Chanin
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Early modern Strand
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The Strand became a centre for scholarship. The Inns of Court at its east end, blessed with encyclopaedic libraries and curricula befitting England’s ‘third universitie’, were augmented by the fine libraries of rare books and manuscripts of the noble mansions. The Strand nobility nurtured talented gardeners; for instance, John Rose, reputedly the first person to cultivate the pineapple in England, was apprenticed in Leicester’s garden. The Restoration period thus witnessed the demolition or re-development of most of the Strand’s great houses, which never recovered from the damage inflicted by the English Civil War on the wealth and prestige of their owners. The Strand’s frontage diversified with taverns and shops, including the Golden Lion, White Lion and King’s Head. The Theatre Royal, however, was the first modern licensed theatre permitted to show serious drama and was the progenitor of the many theatres that now characterise the Strand and West End.

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The Strand

A Biography

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