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Clemens Street History
With special thanks to Jeff Clarke for his contribution to this history of Clemens Street
Clicking on the images will bring up a larger more detailed picture.
Leamington or 'Lamintone' was listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as “240 acres of land worth £4 with two mills worth 24 (old) shillings”. On an early street plan of 1783, Old Leamington is shown as a hamlet with one main street, with tracks leading over the Napton to Warwick canal bridge towards the village of Whitnash.
The 1783 map shows no housing. It does however show the sites of Ellison's Library on the corner with High Street; access to the Royal Hotel which ran behind the buildings to front onto High Street; The Blenheim Hotel; Booth's Terrace running up to the canal bridge and Reads Baths (under the new railway bridge) together with a Meeting House and Smart's Baths
Smart's Marble Baths were built in 1819 extracting saline water from a 60 foot deep borehole and deriving its name from the marble used to build it. They were exquistely fitted out to be in keeping with Clemens Street which at that time was the town's most fashionable thoroughfare. They then became the Imperial Fount Baths. By1850 the name had changed to the Fountain Public House. The original baths contained a library and assembly rooms and was evidence that Clemens Street was both a fashionable and up and coming area for the gentry of the time.
Behind Clemens Street many sub-standard houses were being built at low cost in order to compete with the town's development north of the river. These cramped courts and alleys gradually degenerated into slums and remained so for the next 100 years. The public's desire to “take the waters” began to decline, a change in social trend that impacted on all the baths in the town.
The Railway Inn, a WW1 photo of soldiers and as it stands today.
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This archway gave access to stables at the rear and came out at the back of the current Jordan's shop/Crown Hotel and what was originally The Great Western Hotel on High Street |
On a map of 1800 this building was shown as the site of an Independent Chapel. The first non conformist chapel was built in 1816. By 1848 it had become a theatre only to revert back to a congregational free church in 1868. An 1889 map shows this again as a Free Congregational Church. The original portico was demolished but the three windows still remain. Around 1910, the Zephyr Carburettor Company took over the building and then Lockheed who moved from London and with a small staff began making the brakes for the first Wolsley cars until the company became part of Automotive Products. |
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This sign is on wall of what was the Tap House of the old Blenheim Hotel. It reads “Gossage”. the name of the carriage/stable proprietor and is actually over an older unreadable sign |
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Next to what is currently The Grand Union restaurant was The Reindeer Public House |
Originally a boarding house, the Royal Hotel (shown on a map of 1800) changed its name to the Stoneleigh Hotel in 1812 although at one time, it was the Tap Room for the Blenheim Hotel next door. The adjacent Booth's Terrace was subsequently renamed Tower Street
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The Stoneleigh Arms is now derelict following closure in the 1990's |
It was in this area that one of Leamington's most famous characters James Bissett opened a library, news room and picture gallery
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