Home District, Second Report Parl. Papers, , XXX. Home District, Fourth Report Parl. Papers, , XXI. Home District, Fifth Report Parl. Papers, , XXV. Home District, Sixth Report Parl. Papers, Session 2, IV. Home District, Seventh Report Parl. Home District, Tenth Report Parl.
Home District, Fourteenth Report Parl. Southern District, Twenty-third Report Parl. Papers, , XXIX. Southern District, Twenty-fifth Report Parl. Papers, , XXXV. Southern District, Twenty-seventh Report Parl. Southern District, Twenty-ninth Report Parl. Papers, , XXVI. Southern District, Thirtieth Report Parl. Southern District, Thirty-first Report Parl. Southern District, Thirty-second Report Parl.
Southern District, Thirty-third Report Parl. Southern District, Thirty-fourth Report Parl. Southern District, Thirty-fifth Report Parl. Although I found it an extremely spooky place, I have to confess that I never actually experienced anything paranormal down there, although I often got the distinct impression that I was not alone.
All in all though I found it to be a fantastically atmospheric place and I truly hope that someone will one day buy it up and open it once more to the public. There has been a prison on this site since , although the series of tunnels and passageways date from its last rebuilding in By the midth century the House of Detention, as it became known, was used as a holding prison for those awaiting trial, and an estimated 10, people a year passed through its gates.
The prison was demolished in , but an entire underground section survived and lay undisturbed until the bombs of the Blitz saw it reopened as an air-raid shelter. After World War II it was again largely forgotten until, in , it became a museum, and such it remained until its closure in Descending a clanking set of iron stairs, you'd pass under a grim replica of a grotesque head which, apparently, used to hang over the entrance to the House of Detention.
Numerous storage rooms radiate from the main area. Brief history of the complex, dating from when this was a tourist attraction. The main space, complete with puddles and atmospheric lighting. Note the rusted metal lintel above the right-hand opening. A long, narrow passage spans the entire southern edge of the complex. The scene in the Westminster tunnels from the recent Sherlock Holmes movie was filmed here. Rusted pipes are not always what they seem.
These sections were artificially aged by the recent Sherlock Holmes production. The site is occupied by the Hugh Myddleton School building, now converted into flats. The vaults were reopened as air-raid shelters during the Blitz, and can still be accessed via an entrance on Clerkenwell Close.
Wikimedia Foundation. Clerkenwell Bridewell — was a prison located in the Clerkenwell area, immediately north of the City of London in the modern London Borough of Islington , between c. It was… … Wikipedia. Location Clerkenwell, London C … Wikipedia.
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