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Islington



 
 
Islington is the central district of the London Borough of Islington
London Borough of Islington

The London Borough of Islington is a London borough in North London and Inner London. It was formed in 1965 by merging the former Metropolitan Borough of Metropolitan Borough of Islington and Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury....
. It is an inner-city district in London, spanning from Islington High Street to Highbury Fields, encompassing the area around the busy Upper Street
A1 road (London)

The A1 road in London is an A roads in Great Britain in North London. It runs from the London Wall to Bignell's Corner, where it crosses the M25 and becomes the A1 motorway, continuing to Edinburgh....
. The name is now also often applied to the areas of the borough close to Upper Street such as Barnsbury
Barnsbury

Barnsbury is an area of north London in the London Borough of Islington, in the London N1 and London N7 UK postcodes.The name is a corruption of villa de Iseldon Berners , being so called after the Berners family, who gained ownership of the lands after the Norman Conquest and were powerful medieval manorial lords, owning a large part...
 and Canonbury
Canonbury

Canonbury is a residential district in the London Borough of Islington in the north of London. It is roughly in the area between Essex Road, Upper Street and Cross Street and either side of St Paul's Road....
, developed in the Georgian era
Georgian era

The Georgian era is a period of British history, normally defined as including the reigns of the kings George I of Great Britain, George II of Great Britain, George III of the United Kingdom and George IV of the United Kingdom, i.e....
.

ngton grew as a sprawling village along the line of the Great North Road and has provided the name of the modern borough.






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Encyclopedia


Islington is the central district of the London Borough of Islington
London Borough of Islington

The London Borough of Islington is a London borough in North London and Inner London. It was formed in 1965 by merging the former Metropolitan Borough of Metropolitan Borough of Islington and Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury....
. It is an inner-city district in London, spanning from Islington High Street to Highbury Fields, encompassing the area around the busy Upper Street
A1 road (London)

The A1 road in London is an A roads in Great Britain in North London. It runs from the London Wall to Bignell's Corner, where it crosses the M25 and becomes the A1 motorway, continuing to Edinburgh....
. The name is now also often applied to the areas of the borough close to Upper Street such as Barnsbury
Barnsbury

Barnsbury is an area of north London in the London Borough of Islington, in the London N1 and London N7 UK postcodes.The name is a corruption of villa de Iseldon Berners , being so called after the Berners family, who gained ownership of the lands after the Norman Conquest and were powerful medieval manorial lords, owning a large part...
 and Canonbury
Canonbury

Canonbury is a residential district in the London Borough of Islington in the north of London. It is roughly in the area between Essex Road, Upper Street and Cross Street and either side of St Paul's Road....
, developed in the Georgian era
Georgian era

The Georgian era is a period of British history, normally defined as including the reigns of the kings George I of Great Britain, George II of Great Britain, George III of the United Kingdom and George IV of the United Kingdom, i.e....
.

Modern definition

Islington grew as a sprawling village along the line of the Great North Road and has provided the name of the modern borough. This gave rise to some confusion, as neighbouring districts may also be said to be in Islington. This district is bounded by Liverpool Road
Liverpool Road

Liverpool Road is located in the London Borough of Islington of inner north London. Liverpool Road runs parallel to A1 road #Upper Street and is largely made up of Georgian architecture. It starts at Upper Street and joins Holloway Road....
 to the west and New North Road to the south-east. Its northernmost point is in the area of Highbury
Highbury

Highbury is an area in the London Borough of Islington....
. The main north-south high street, Upper Street
A1 road (London)

The A1 road in London is an A roads in Great Britain in North London. It runs from the London Wall to Bignell's Corner, where it crosses the M25 and becomes the A1 motorway, continuing to Edinburgh....
 splits at Highbury Corner to Holloway Road to the west and St. Paul's Road to the east.

The area round Angel tube station
Angel tube station

Angel tube station is a London Underground station in The Angel, Islington, Islington. It is on the Bank and Monument stations branch of the Northern Line, between Old Street station and King's Cross St....
 is sometimes considered a district in its own right, The Angel, Islington
The Angel, Islington

The Angel was originally an inn near a toll gate on the Great North Road , but now informally refers to this part of Islington in London. The corner itself is actually in Finsbury which was a separate borough until 1965 when the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury merged with the Metropolitan Borough of Islington to form the London Borough of...
. The northern part of this area (from the Liverpool Road
Liverpool Road

Liverpool Road is located in the London Borough of Islington of inner north London. Liverpool Road runs parallel to A1 road #Upper Street and is largely made up of Georgian architecture. It starts at Upper Street and joins Holloway Road....
 junction northwards) is within the district of Islington, while the southern half is in neighbouring Finsbury
Finsbury

Finsbury is a small district in the south of the London Borough of Islington and north of the City of London....
. The area below Penton Steet and east of Pentonville Road is the adjoining district of Pentonville
Pentonville

Pentonville is an area of north-central London in the London Borough of Islington, centred on the Pentonville Road. Pentonville was part of the ancient parish of Clerkenwell, and was incorporated into the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury by the London Government Act 1899....
.

History


Etymology

Islington was originally named by the Saxons Giseldone (1005), then Gislandune (1062). The name means 'Gisla's hill' from the Old English personal name
Personal name

A personal name is the proper name identifying an individual person, and usually comprises a given name bestowed at Childbirth or at a young age....
 Gisla and dun 'hill', 'down
Downland

A downland is an area of open chalk hills. This term is especially used to describe the chalk countryside in southern England. Areas of downland are often referred to as Downs....
'. The name then later mutated to Isledon, which remained in use well into the 17th century when the modern form arose. In medieval times, Islington was just one of many small manors hereabouts, along with Bernersbury, Neweton Berewe or Hey-bury and Canonesbury (Barnsbury, Highbury and Canonbury - names first recorded in the 13th and 14th centuries).

Origins

Agricultural Hall Islington Iln 1861
Agricultural Hall Cattle Show Iln 1861
Some roads on the edge of the area, including Essex Road were known as streets by the medieval period, possibly indicating a Roman
Roman Britain

Roman Britain refers to those parts of the island of Great Britain controlled by the Roman Empire between AD 43 and 410. The Romans referred to their province as Britannia....
 origin, but little physical evidence remains. What is known is that the Great North Road, from Aldersgate
Aldersgate

Aldersgate was a City gate in the London Wall in the City of London, which has given its name to a ward and Aldersgate Street, a road leading north from the site of the gate, towards Clerkenwell in the London Borough of Islington....
 came into use in the 14th century, connecting with a new turnpike (toll road) up Highgate Hill. This was along the line of modern Upper Street, with a toll gate at The Angel
The Angel, Islington

The Angel was originally an inn near a toll gate on the Great North Road , but now informally refers to this part of Islington in London. The corner itself is actually in Finsbury which was a separate borough until 1965 when the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury merged with the Metropolitan Borough of Islington to form the London Borough of...
, defining the extent of the village. The Back Road, the modern Liverpool Road
Liverpool Road

Liverpool Road is located in the London Borough of Islington of inner north London. Liverpool Road runs parallel to A1 road #Upper Street and is largely made up of Georgian architecture. It starts at Upper Street and joins Holloway Road....
, was primarily a drovers' road where cattle would be rested before the final leg of their journey to Smithfield
Smithfield, London

Smithfield is an area in the north-west part of the City of London, mostly known for its centuries-old meat market and its bloody history of executions of heretics and political opponents....
. Pens and sheds were erected along this road to accommodate the animals.

Islington lay on the estates of the Bishop of London
Bishop of London

The Bishop of London is the Ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of London in the Province of Canterbury.The diocese covers 458 km? of 17 boroughs of Greater London north of the Thames and a small part of the County of Surrey....
, and the Dean and Chapter of St Pauls
St Paul's Cathedral

St Paul's Cathedral is the Anglicanism cathedral on Ludgate Hill, in the City of London, and the seat of the Bishop of London. The present building dates from the 17th century and is generally reckoned to be London's fifth St Paul's Cathedral, although the number is higher if every major medieval reconstruction is counted as a new cathedr...
. There were substantial medieval moated manor house
Manor house

A manor house or fortified manor-house is a country house, which has historically formed the administrative centre of a manor , the lowest unit of territorial organization in the feudal system....
s in the area, principally at Canonbury and Highbury. In 1548, there are 440 communicants listed and the rural atmosphere, with access to the City and Westminster, made it a popular residence for the rich and eminent. The local inns, however harboured many fugitives and recursants.

The Royal Agricultural Hall was built in 1862, on the Liverpool Road
Liverpool Road

Liverpool Road is located in the London Borough of Islington of inner north London. Liverpool Road runs parallel to A1 road #Upper Street and is largely made up of Georgian architecture. It starts at Upper Street and joins Holloway Road....
 site of William Dixon's Cattle Layers. The hall was 75 ft high, and the arched glass roof spanned 125 ft. It was built for the annual Smithfield Show in December, but was popular for other purposes, including recitals and the Royal Tournament
Royal Tournament

The Royal Tournament was the World's largest military tattoo and pageant, held by the British Armed Forces annually between 1880 and 1999. The venue was originally the Royal Agricultural Hall and latterly the Earls Court Exhibition Centre....
. It was the primary exhibition site for London until the 20th century, and the largest building of its kind, holding up to 50,000 people. It had been requisitioned for use by the Mount Pleasant sorting office during World War II, and never re-opened. The main hall has now been incorporated into the Business Design Centre.

Water sources

Hugh Myddleton Islington Green 1
The hill on which Islington stands has long supplied the City of London
City of London

The City of London is a geographically small city status in the United Kingdom within Greater London, England. It is the historic core of London around which, along with Westminster, the modern conurbation grew....
 with water, the first projects drawing water through wooden pipes from the many springs that lay at its foot, in Finsbury
Finsbury

Finsbury is a small district in the south of the London Borough of Islington and north of the City of London....
. These included Sadler's Wells, London Spa and Clerkenwell
Clerkenwell

Clerkenwell is an area of central London in the London Borough of Islington. Clerkenwell was once known as London's "Little Italy" due to its extensive Italian population from the 1850s to the 1960s....
.

By the 17th century these traditional sources were inadequate to supply the growing population and plans were laid to construct a waterway, the New River
New River (England)

The New River is a man-made waterway in England, opened in 1613 to supply London with fresh drinking water taken from the River Lee and from Amwell Springs , and other springs and wells along its course....
, to bring fresh water from the source of the River Lee
River Lee (England)

The River Lee or River Lea in England originates in Leagrave Park , Leagrave, Luton in the Chiltern Hills and flows generally southeast, east, and then south to London where it meets the River Thames , the last section being known as Bow Creek....
, in Hertfordshire
Hertfordshire

Hertfordshire is a Ceremonial counties of England and Metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties of England Counties of England in the East of England region of England....
 to New River Head, below Islington in Finsbury
Finsbury

Finsbury is a small district in the south of the London Borough of Islington and north of the City of London....
. The river was opened on September 29, 1613 by Sir Hugh Myddleton
Hugh Myddleton

Sir Hugh Myddelton , 1st Baronet was a Wales goldsmith, clothmaker, banker, entrepreneur, mine-owner and self-taught engineer.The sixth son of Richard Myddelton, governor of Denbigh Castle and MP for Denbigh in north Wales, he travelled to seek his fortune in London and after being apprenticed to a goldsmith became so successful in that...
, the constructor of the project. His statue still stands where Upper Street meets Essex Road. The course of the river ran to the east of Upper Street, and much of its course is now covered and forms a linear park through the area.

The Regents Canal passes through Islington. For much of its length, it travels through an tunnel that runs from Colebrook Row, just east of the Angel, to emerge at Muriel Street, not far from Caledonian Road. The subterranean stretch is marked with a series of pavement plaques, so that canal walkers may find their way from one entrance to the other above ground. The area of the canal east of the tunnel and north of the City Road was once dominated by much warehousing and industry surrounding the large City Road Basin and Wenlock Basin. Those old buildings that survive here are now largely residential or small work units. This stretch boasts one of the few old canal pubs with an entrance actually on the tow-path, The Narrowboat.

The canal was constructed in 1820, to carry cargo from Limehouse
Limehouse

Limehouse is a place in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It is on the northern bank of the River Thames opposite Rotherhithe and between Ratcliff to the west and Millwall to the east....
 into the canal system. There is no tow-path in the tunnel, and bargees had to walk their barges through, braced against the roof. Commercial use of the canal has declined since the 1960s.

Market gardens and entertainments

In the 17th and 18th centuries, the availability of water made Islington a place for growing vegetables to feed London. The manor became a popular resort for Londoners, due to this rural aspect and many public houses were founded to serve the needs of both visitors and travellers on the turnpike. By 1716, there were 56 ale-house keepers in Upper Street, also offering pleasure and tea gardens, and activities such as archery, skittle alleys and bowling. By the 18th century music and dancing were offered, together with billiards, firework displays and balloon ascents. The King's Head Tavern
The King's Head Theatre

The King's Head Theatre, founded in 1970 by the late Dan Crawford, is an Off-West End venue in London. It was the first pub theatre in the United Kingdom....
, now a Victorian
Victorian era

The Victorian Era of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland was the period of Victoria of the United Kingdom reign from June 1837 to January 1901....
 building, with a theatre, has remained on the same site, opposite the parish church, since 1543. The founder of the theatre, Dan Crawford, who died in 2005, disagreed with the introduction of decimal coinage. For twenty-plus years after decimalisation (on 15 February 1971), the bar continued to show prices and charge for drinks in pre-decimalisation currency.

By the 19th century, many music halls and theatres were established around Islington Green
Islington Green

Islington Green is a small triangle of open land at the convergence of A1 road #Upper Street and Essex Road in the London Borough of Islington....
. One such was Collins' Music Hall, the remains of which is now incorporated into a bookshop. It stood on the site of the Landsdowne Tavern, where the landlord had built an entertainment room for customers who wanted to sing (and later for professional entertainers). It was founded in 1862 by Samuel Thomas Collins Vagg, by 1897 this had become a 1,800 seat theatre with 10 bars. This theatre suffered damage in a fire in 1958, and has not reopened. Between 92 and 162 acts were put on each evening and performers who started there included Marie Lloyd
Marie Lloyd

Matilda Alice Victoria Wood was an England music hall singer, best known as Marie Lloyd....
, George Robey
George Robey

George Edward Wade , better known by his stage name, George Robey, was an England music hall comedian and star. He was marketed as the "Prime Minister of Mirth"....
, Harry Lauder
Harry Lauder

Sir Henry Lauder , known professionally as Harry Lauder, was a notable Scotland entertainer, described by Sir Winston Churchill as "Scotland's greatest ever ambassador!"...
, Harry Tate
Harry Tate

Harry Tate was a Scotland comedian who performed both in the music halls and in films. Born in 1872 as Ronald Macdonald Hutchinson, he worked for Tate & Lyle before going on the stage, and took his stage name from them....
, George Formby, Vesta Tilley
Vesta Tilley

Matilda Alice Powles , was an England Drag king. At the age of 11, she adopted the stage name Vesta Tilley becoming the most famous and well paid music hall male impersonator of her day....
, Tommy Trinder
Tommy Trinder

Thomas Edward Trinder Order of the British Empire known as Tommy Trinder, was an English stage, screen and radio comedian of the pre and post war years whose catchphrase was 'You lucky people'....
, Gracie Fields
Gracie Fields

Dame Gracie Fields, Order of the British Empire , born Grace Stansfield, was an England/Italy singer and comedienne who became one of the greatest stars of both film and music hall....
, Tommy Handley
Tommy Handley

Tommy Handley was an England comedian mainly known for the BBC radio program It's That Man Again .Born at Toxteth Park, Liverpool in Lancashire....
 and Norman Wisdom
Norman Wisdom

Sir Norman J Wisdom, Order of the British Empire is an England former comedian, singer and actor....
.
Islington E Baker 1805
The Islington Literary and Scientific Society was established in 1833 and first met in Mr. Edgeworth's academy, on Upper Street. Its object was to spread knowledge through lectures, discussions, and experiments, politics and theology being forbidden. A building - the Literary and Scientific Institution - was erected in 1837 in Wellington (later Almeida) Street, designed by Roumieu and Gough in a stuccoed Grecian style. It included a library, with 3,300 volumes in 1839, reading room, museum, laboratory, and lecture theatre seating 500. The subscription was 2 guineas a year. The library was sold off in 1872 and the building sold or leased in 1874 to the Wellington Club, which occupied it until 1886. In 1885 the hall was used for concerts, balls, and public meetings. The Salvation Army
Salvation Army

The Salvation Army, an international movement, is an evangelical part of the Christian Church. It has a quasi-military structure and it was founded in 1865 in Great Britian as the East London Christian Mission by William Booth and Catherine Booth....
 bought the building in 1890, renamed it the Wellington Castle barracks, and remained there until 1955. The building became a factory and showroom for Beck's British Carnival Novelties for a few years from 1956 then remained empty until in 1978 a campaign began to turn it into a theatre. A public appeal was launched in 1981 and a festival of avant-garde theatre and music was held there and at other Islington venues in 1982, and the successful Almeida Theatre
Almeida Theatre

The Almeida Theatre, opened in 1980, is a 325 seat studio theatre with an international reputation which takes its name from the street in which it is located, off A1 road , in the London Borough of Islington....
 founded.

Housing

Some development took place to accommodate the popularity of nearby Sadler's Wells , which became a resort in the 16th century, but the 19th century saw the greatest expansion in housing, soon to cover the whole parish. In 1801, the population was 10,212; by 1891 there were 319,143 inhabitants in the borough. This rapid expansion was partly due to the introduction of horse-drawn omnibuses in 1830. With large well-built houses and fashionable squares, clerks, artisans and professionals were drawn to the district. However, from the middle of the 1800s, the poor were being displaced by clearances in inner London to build the new railway stations and goods yards. They settled in Islington, with the houses becoming occupied by many families. This, combined with the railways pushing into outer Middlesex, reduced Islington's attraction for the better off, and the area fell into a long decline; and by the mid-twentieth century the area was largely run down and a by-word for urban poverty.

World War II caused much damage to Islington's housing stock, with 3,200 dwellings destroyed. While before the war, municipal housing
Council house

The council house is a form of public housing in the United Kingdom. Council houses were built and operated by local Municipality to supply uncrowded, well built homes on secure tenancies at affordable rents to the local population....
 had not had much impact, after the war many bomb sites were redeveloped, both by the Metropolitan Borough of Islington
Metropolitan Borough of Islington

The Metropolitan Borough of Islington was a metropolitan borough within the County of London from 1900 to 1965, when it was amalgamated with the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury to form the London Borough of Islington....
 and the London County Council
London County Council

London County Council was the principal local government body for the County of London, throughout its 1889-1965 existence, and the first London-wide general municipal authority to be directly elected....
. Clearance of the worst terraced housing was still undertaken, but Islington continued to be both the most dense (least open space), and the borough with the highest level of overcrowding.

From the 1960s the Georgian terraces were rediscovered by middle class families, and many of the houses were rehabilitated, with the area becoming newly fashionable. This displacement of the poor by the aspirational has become known as gentrification. Among these new residents were a number of the central figures in the New Labour movement, including Tony Blair
Tony Blair

Anthony Charles Lynton "Tony" Blair is a British politician, who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 2 May 1997 to 27 June 2007....
 before his victory in the 1997 general election
United Kingdom general election, 1997

The UK general election, 1997 was held on 1 May 1997. The Labour Party won the general election in a landslide victory with 418 seats, the most seats the party has ever held....
. "Islington is widely regarded as the spiritual home of Britain's left-wing intelligentsia" (The Guardian
The Guardian

Sorry, no overview for this topic
)
. The Granita Pact
Blair-Brown deal

The Blair-Brown deal, also known as the Granita Pact, is a shorthand term for a widely-held belief in British politics that Tony Blair and Gordon Brown made a gentlemen's agreement after the death of Labour Party leader John Smith in 1994....
, between Gordon Brown
Gordon Brown

James Gordon Brown UK Member of Parliament is a United Kingdom Labour Party politician and the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Brown assumed office in June 2007, after the resignation of Tony Blair and three days after becoming leader of the governing Labour Party....
 and Tony Blair, is said to have been made at a, now defunct, restaurant on Upper Street.

The completion of the Victoria line
Victoria Line

The Victoria line is part of the London Underground system and is a deep-level line running from the south-west to the north-east of London. It is coloured light blue on the Tube map and, in terms of the average number of journeys per mile, is the busiest line on the network....
 and redevelopment of Angel tube station
Angel tube station

Angel tube station is a London Underground station in The Angel, Islington, Islington. It is on the Bank and Monument stations branch of the Northern Line, between Old Street station and King's Cross St....
 has created the conditions for developers to build blocks of small flats, popular with young professionals, intensifying use of the area. The inns of the 17th century are now replaced with busy public houses and trendy wine bars. Small shops selling bijou items are increasingly priced out of the area, and replaced by national (and international) chains. Islington remains a place in constant flux.

Monopoly fame

The area is also well-known due to its inclusion in the British version of Monopoly
Monopoly (game)

Monopoly is a board game published by Parker Brothers, a subsidiary of Hasbro. Players compete to acquire wealth through stylized economics activity involving the buying, renting, and trading of property using play money, as players take turns moving around the board according to the roll of the dice....
 which features The Angel, Islington
The Angel, Islington

The Angel was originally an inn near a toll gate on the Great North Road , but now informally refers to this part of Islington in London. The corner itself is actually in Finsbury which was a separate borough until 1965 when the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury merged with the Metropolitan Borough of Islington to form the London Borough of...
. However, in the game the Angel is the third cheapest property on the board. 'The Angel, Islington' was included as the licensees considered the names of places they were to use over tea in the Lyon's Corner House
J. Lyons and Co.

Joseph Lyons and Co. was a United Kingdom company which controlled the largest food empire in the 1930s. It had a large central Checking Department at its headquarters in Cadby Hall, Hammersmith, London with hundreds of clerks and mechanical Burroughs Corporation adding machines to run this empire....
, built on the site of the original Angel Inn.

Nearby Monopoly locations are Pentonville Road (mostly in Islington) which runs from King's Cross station to The Angel.

The final insult


Islington may have played its own small part in the destruction and conquest by England of north Wales. For in December 1277 the last native prince of Wales, Llywelyn the Last
Llywelyn the Last

Llywelyn ap Gruffydd or Llywelyn Ein Llyw Olaf —meaning Llywelyn, Our Last Leader—was the last prince of an independent Wales before its conquest by Edward I of England....
, while staying in Islington in preparation of his ritual act of homage to the English king was so heinously offended by the display put on by the locals that he and his lords resolved never to return and from thence forth to fight England to the death!

In literature

Islington features extensively in modern English literature and culture:
  • Douglas Adams
    Douglas Adams

    Douglas Noel Adams was an England author, dramatist and musician. He is best known as the author of the The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series....
     lived in Islington and used it as a setting in his novels, and named a character in his famous Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy series after a well known local estate agents - Hotblack Desiato.
  • In Neil Gaiman
    Neil Gaiman

    Neil Richard Gaiman is an England author of science fiction and fantasy short stories and novels, graphic novels, comics, and films. His notable works include The Sandman comic series, Stardust , American Gods and Coraline....
    's best selling novel Neverwhere
    Neverwhere (novel)

    Neverwhere is the companion novelization by Neil Gaiman of the mini-series Neverwhere, by Neil Gaiman and Lenny Henry. The plot and characters are exactly the same as in the series, with the exception that the novel form allowed Gaiman to expand and elaborate on certain elements of the story and restore changes made in the televised v...
     Islington is an angel that lives under London, named after the Angel tube station.
  • Martha Grimes
    Martha Grimes

    Martha Grimes is an United States author of detective fiction.She was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to D.W., a city solicitor, and to June, who owned the Mountain Lake Hotel in Western Maryland where Martha and her brother spent much of their childhood....
    ' fictional detective, Richard Jury
    Richard Jury

    Richard Jury is a fictional Scotland Yard detective who stars in a series of Detective fiction novels written by Martha Grimes.Initially a chief inspector, later a Superintendent , Jury is invariably assisted in his cases by Melrose Plant, a British aristocrat who has given up his titles, and his hypochondriacal but dependable sergeant, Alf...
    , lives in a flat in Islington.
  • Simon Gray
    Simon Gray

    Simon James Holliday Gray Order of the British Empire was a prolific postwar British playwright, whose work was performed worldwide.Simon Gray was born in Hayling Island, Hampshire, England....
    's play Otherwise Engaged
    Otherwise Engaged

    Otherwise Engaged is a bleakly comic play by English playwright Simon Gray. It opened at the Queen's Theatre in London on 10 July 1975, with Alan Bates as the star and Harold Pinter as director, produced by Michael Codron....
     is set in Islington. It was written in the 1970s.
  • In The Zoo
    The Zoo

    The Zoo is a one-act comic opera, with music by Arthur Sullivan and a libretto by B. C. Stephenson, writing under the pen name of Bolton Rowe....
    , a comic opera
    Comic opera

    Comic opera, or light opera, denotes a sung dramatic work of a light or comic nature, usually with a happy ending.Comic opera first developed in 18th-century Italy as opera buffa, an alternative to opera seria....
     by Arthur Sullivan
    Arthur Sullivan

    Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan Royal Victorian Order was an English composer, of Irish and Italian descent, best known for his comic opera Gilbert and Sullivan with libretto W....
     and B. C. Stephenson
    B. C. Stephenson

    Benjamin Charles Stephenson, or B. C. Stephenson, was a dramatist, lyricist, and librettist in Victorian England....
    , two of the main characters are the Duke of Islington and his beloved, whom he asks to become the Duchess of Islington.
  • Nick Hornby
    Nick Hornby

    Nick Hornby is an England novelist and essayist. He was brought up in Maidenhead and was educated at Maidenhead Grammar School and Jesus College, Cambridge....
    's book, and later film, About a Boy
    About a Boy

    About a Boy is a 1998 novel by British writer Nick Hornby. It was adapted into a film in 2002....
     are set in Islington.
  • Nick Hornby
    Nick Hornby

    Nick Hornby is an England novelist and essayist. He was brought up in Maidenhead and was educated at Maidenhead Grammar School and Jesus College, Cambridge....
    's novel SLAM is set in Islington.
  • The film, Notes on a Scandal
    Notes on a Scandal

    Notes on a Scandal is a 2003 psychological thriller/drama novel by Zo? Heller. It is about a female teacher at a London comprehensive school who begins an affair with one of her minor pupils....
     is set in Islington.


Notable residents, past and present

This section is solely for residents with a direct link to the area around Upper Street (the centre of Islington); for residents of the London Borough of Islington
London Borough of Islington

The London Borough of Islington is a London borough in North London and Inner London. It was formed in 1965 by merging the former Metropolitan Borough of Metropolitan Borough of Islington and Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury....
, or other districts, please see the relevant article. If adding to this list please add a citation explicitly showing the local connection
  • Tony Blair
    Tony Blair

    Anthony Charles Lynton "Tony" Blair is a British politician, who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 2 May 1997 to 27 June 2007....
    , former Prime Minister of the UK, lived on Richmond Crescent in Islington
    Islington

    Islington is the central district of the London Borough of Islington. It is an inner-city district in London, spanning from Islington High Street to Highbury Fields, encompassing the area around the busy A1 road #Upper Street....
     before moving to Downing Street
    Downing Street

    Downing Street is the street in London, England, which for over two hundred years has contained the official residences of two of the most senior British cabinet ministers: the First Lord of the Treasury, an office held by the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and the Second Lord of the Treasury, an office held by the Chancellor of the E...
  • Nadia Almada
    Nadia Almada

    Nadia Almada is a Madeiran reality television star, best-known for being the first transsexual winner of Big Brother 2004 of Big Brother in 2004....
    , first transsexual winner of Big Brother
    Big Brother (UK)

    Big Brother is a reality television series broadcast in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland on Channel 4 and E4 , and on S4C in Wales....
  • Douglas Adams
    Douglas Adams

    Douglas Noel Adams was an England author, dramatist and musician. He is best known as the author of the The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series....
    , writer, lived on Duncan Terrace later renting his house to comedian Angus Deayton
    Angus Deayton

    Gordon Angus Deayton is an England actor, writer, musician, comedian and television presenter. He is best-known as the presenter of the satirical panel game Have I Got News for You, a job from which he was sacked in October 2002 after a second round of tabloid allegations about his personal life....
    .
  • Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje
    Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje

    Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje is an English actor, solicitor and former model ....
    , actor was born here.
  • Lily Allen
    Lily Allen

    Lily Rose Beatrice Allen is an England singer-songwriter. Best known for her songs "Smile ", "LDN ", "Littlest Things", "Alfie ", "Oh My God ", "The Fear " and her Mockney style, Allen is the daughter of actor/musician Keith Allen and film producer Alison Owen....
    , singer and daughter of actor Keith Allen
    Keith Allen

    Keith Philip George Allen is a Wales-born United Kingdom actor, comedian, singer-songwriter, artist and author....
  • Neal Ascherson
    Neal Ascherson

    Charles Neal Ascherson , is a Scotland journalist.He was born in Edinburgh and educated at Eton College and King's College, Cambridge, where he read history....
    , journalist
  • Tash Aw
    Tash Aw

    Tash Aw, whose full name is Aw Ta-Shi is a Malaysian writer currently living in London....
    , Whitbread Book Award winning author.
  • Nina Bawden
    Nina Bawden

    Nina Bawden CBE is a popular United Kingdom novelist and children's writer. Her mother was a teacher and her father a Marine .When World War II broke out she spent the school holidays at a farm in Shropshire along with her mother and her brothers, but lived in Aberdare, Wales, during term time....
    , Author, has lived in Islington for many years
  • James Beck
    James Beck

    Stanley James Beck was an England actor best remembered for his role as Private Joe Walker, the cockney spiv in the popular BBC sitcom Dad's Army which ran from 1968 to 1977....
     Actor was born here.
  • Jay Bothroyd
    Jay Bothroyd

    Jay Bothroyd is an England football striker, of Guyana descent, currently playing for Cardiff City F.C.....
    , footballer
  • Gary Kemp
    Gary Kemp

    Gary Kemp is an England Pop music musician and actor who was the guitar player and chief songwriter for the 1980s Synthpop band Spandau Ballet....
     and Martin Kemp of Spandau Ballet
    Spandau Ballet

    Spandau Ballet are a popular United Kingdom band famous in the 1980s. Initially inspired by the New Romantic fashion, they quickly steered in to a mixture of funk, jazz, soul and synthpop, then eventually mellowed into a mainstream pop music act....
     born in Islington lived on Elmore Street N1.
  • Kathy Burke
    Kathy Burke

    Katherine Lucy Bridget Burke is an England actor, comedienne, playwright and Theatre direction....
     Actress, Director lives in Islington.
  • Alexandra Burke
    Alexandra Burke

    Alexandra Imelda Cecelia Ewan Burke is an English singer and winner of the The X Factor of UK television talent show The X Factor . Burke had previously auditioned for the The X Factor of the show, where she reached the last seven in her category but was not selected for the The X Factor #Live_shows....
    , Singer and winner of The X Factor 2008
  • John Chapple
    John Chapple

    Field Marshal Sir John Lyon Chapple Order of the Bath, Order of the British Empire was Chief of the General Staff, the professional head of the British Army....
    , One of the last Field Marshal
    Field Marshal

    Field marshal is a military officer rank. Today it is the highest rank in the armies in which it is used, one step above a general or colonel-general....
    s of Great Britain and Governor of Gibraltar
    Gibraltar

    Gibraltar is a British overseas territory located near the southernmost tip of the Iberian Peninsula overlooking the Strait of Gibraltar. The territory shares a border with Spain to the north....
  • Joe Cole
    Joe Cole

    Joseph John "Joe" Cole is a professional Association football who plays for Chelsea F.C. of the FA Premier League and plays for the England national football team....
    , Footballer for Chelsea FC and England
  • Sorcha Cusack
    Sorcha Cusack

    Sorcha Cusack is an Ireland actress. She is the daughter of the late Irish actors Cyril Cusack and Maureen Cusack, and sister of Sin?ad Cusack, Niamh Cusack, and half sister to Catherine Cusack....
    , Actress
  • Phil Daniels
    Phil Daniels

    Philip Daniels is an England actor, most noted for film roles as Jimmy in Quadrophenia , Richards in Scum , Kevin Wicks in EastEnders, and for his collaborations with Britpop band Blur ....
    , Actor.
  • Alan Davies
    Alan Davies

    Alan Davies is an England comedy, writer, and actor, best known for starring in mystery series Jonathan Creek, as well as his appearances as panellist on QI....
     Actor, Comedian, Radio Presenter, Star of Jonathon Creek and Bob and Rose
    Bob and Rose

    Bob and Rose is a British television drama, originally screened in six one-hour episodes on the ITV network in the UK in the autumn of 2001....
    , etc. lives in Highbury, Islington
  • Dido
    Dido (singer)

    Dido Florian Cloud de Bounevialle O'Malley Armstrong professionally known as Dido is an Dido #Awards England Singer-songwriter....
    , singer, was born in Islington and owns a property there.
  • Colin Firth
    Colin Firth

    Colin Andrew Firth is an United Kingdom film, television and stage actor. Firth first gained wide public attention, especially in Britain, for his portrayal of Fitzwilliam Darcy in the highly acclaimed Pride and Prejudice of Pride and Prejudice....
    , actor, is a resident.
  • Peaches Geldof
    Peaches Geldof

    Peaches Honeyblossom Michelle Charlotte Angel Vanessa Geldof is a British socialite and occasional Presenter....
    , celebrity socialite; daughter of Bob Geldof
    Bob Geldof

    Robert Frederick Zenon Geldof KBE, known as Bob Geldof , is an Republic of Ireland singer, songwriter, actor and political activist who became famous as a member of the Rock music The Boomtown Rats....
     and Paula Yates
    Paula Yates

    Paula Elizabeth Yates was a British television presenter and writer, best known for her work on two iconic television Television programs, The Tube and The Big Breakfast....
    .
  • Kate Greenaway
    Kate Greenaway

    Kate Greenaway was a children's book illustrator and writer. Her first book, Under The Window , a collection of simple, perfectly idyllic verses concerning children who endlessly gathered posies, untouched by the Industrial Revolution, was a best-seller....
    , children's writer and book illustrator, lived on Upper Street for 20 years before moving to Holloway
    Holloway, London

    Holloway is an inner-city district in the London Borough of Islington and follows for the most part, the line of the Holloway Road . At the centre of Holloway is the Nag's Head, London area....
    .
  • John Glascock
    John Glascock

    John Glascock was the bass guitarist for the rock band Jethro Tull from December 1975 until August 1979. He died in 1979, at the age of 28, as a result of a congenital heart defect....
    , (1951-1979) (musician), bassist of Carmen from 1971-1974 and Jethro Tull
    Jethro Tull (band)

    Jethro Tull are a United Kingdom rock music group formed in 1967. Their music is characterised by the songs, vocals and flute work of Ian Anderson , who has led the band since its founding, and guitarist Martin Barre, who has #Lineups....
     from 1975-1979 was born and raised in Islington
  • Tony Hadley
    Tony Hadley

    Tony Hadley is an England Pop music singer who fronted the 1980s synthpop/new wave music band Spandau Ballet.The group disbanded in 1989, after their final recording studio album, Heart Like a Sky, failed to live up to the critical and commercial success of their earlier albums, such as True and Parade ....
    , lead singer of Spandau Ballet
    Spandau Ballet

    Spandau Ballet are a popular United Kingdom band famous in the 1980s. Initially inspired by the New Romantic fashion, they quickly steered in to a mixture of funk, jazz, soul and synthpop, then eventually mellowed into a mainstream pop music act....
     and solo artist, was born in Islington in 1960.
  • Edmund Halley, Astronomer Royal
    Astronomer Royal

    Astronomer Royal is a senior post in the Royal Household of the Monarch of the United Kingdom. There are two officers, the senior being the Astronomer Royal dating from 22 June 1675; the second is the Astronomer Royal for Scotland dating from 1834....
     and discoverer of Halley's Comet lived in Islington (exact location unknown) from 1665
  • Isabel Hilton
    Isabel Hilton

    Isabel Hilton is a Scotland journalist and broadcaster based in London.She was educated at Edinburgh University where she studied Chinese to post-graduate level....
    , journalist and broadcaster
  • Boris Johnson MP
    Boris Johnson

    Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson is an England politician and journalist. The current Mayor of London, he previously served as the Conservative Party Member of Parliament#United Kingdom for Henley and as editor of The Spectator magazine....
    , Mayor of London
  • Charlie G. Hawkins
    Charlie G. Hawkins

    Charlie George Hawkins is an England actor. He was raised in Islington where he has lived since birth. He was named after Charlie George, the famous Arsenal footballer....
    , actor of Darren Miller
    Darren Miller

    Darren Miller is a fictional character in the popular BBC soap opera EastEnders. He is played by Charlie G. Hawkins, and made his first appearance on 6 September 2004....
     in EastEnders
    EastEnders

    EastEnders is a popular and award-winning television soap opera, first broadcast in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 19 February 1985. It currently ranks within the top of the most watched shows in the United Kingdom....
    .
  • William Hogarth
    William Hogarth

    William Hogarth was a major England painting, Printmaking, pictorial satire, Social criticism and editorial cartoonist who has been credited with pioneering western sequential art....
    , artist, was born in Bartholomew Close in 1697 and spent his early years in Islington.
  • Yusuf Islam, musician.
  • Ian Jack
    Ian Jack

    Ian Jack is a Scotland journalist who was the editor of the literary magazine Granta from 1995 to 2007. Granta 98 "The Deep End" was the last issue he edited; it was the 48th issue he had edited....
    , writer and journalist.
  • Skandar Keynes
    Skandar Keynes

    'Skandar Amin Casper Keynes' is an English actor. He is best known for starring as Edmund Pevensie in The Chronicles of Narnia . He has appeared in the first two installments, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, released on 16 May 2008, and will star in The Chro...
    , actor The Chronicles of Narnia (film series)
    The Chronicles of Narnia (film series)

    The Chronicles of Narnia is a series of Epic film fantasy films from Walden Media based on the series of novels, The Chronicles of Narnia written by C....
  • Danny King (author)
    Danny King (author)

    Daniel Michael King is a British writer....
    , wrote The Burglar Diaries and Thieves Like Us (TV series)
    Thieves Like Us (TV Series)

    Thieves Like Us is a six part sitcom showing on BBC Three based on the book The Burglar Diaries which was first broadcast in 2007.It follows the lives of Bex and Ollie, a couple of jobbing burglars who make their living by robbing factories, warehouses, offices and shops, and take work wherever they can find it....
  • Charles Lamb, writer, lived in Chapel Street from 1796 and later in Colebrook Row.
  • Hugh Laurie
    Hugh Laurie

    James Hugh Calum Laurie, Order of the British Empire is an English actor, comedian, writer and musician. He first reached fame as one half of the Fry and Laurie double act, along with his friend and comedy partner, Stephen Fry, and then as a cast member of Blackadder....
    , actor
  • Edward Lear
    Edward Lear

    Edward Lear was an England artist, illustrator and writer known for his literary nonsense, in poetry and prose, and especially his limerick , a form that he popularised....
     writer, poet, artist, born in Islington
  • Heath Ledger
    Heath Ledger

    Heath Andrew Ledger was an Australian television and film actor. After performing roles in Australian television and film during the 1990s, Ledger moved to the United States in 1998 to develop his movie career....
     Lived in Roman way, Islington while filming his final film in 2007 before his death
  • V.I. Lenin lived at 30 Holford Square from 1902 and later at 16, Percy Circus.
  • Leona Lewis
    Leona Lewis

    Leona Louise Lewis is a UK Pop/R&B artist who was born 3 April 1985 in London. She was the first female winner of the UK reality TV series The X Factor ....
    , singer, winner of the third series of The X-Factor.
  • Louise Lombard
    Louise Lombard

    Louise Lombard is an English people actor....
     Actress
  • Louisa Lytton
    Louisa Lytton

    Louisa Claire Lytton is an English actor who was born in London Borough of Camden and lives in Islington. She rose to fame in 2005 when joining EastEnders as Ruby Allen....
    , Actress
  • Marianne Majerus
    Marianne Majerus

    File:Marianne_Majerus.jpgMarianne Andr?e Majerus is a garden and portrait photographer based in London. She is one of Europe's leading specialist garden photographers....
    , photographer
  • James McAvoy
    James McAvoy

    James Andrew McAvoy is a Scotland stage and screen actor known for his roles in Atonement , The Last King of Scotland , Wanted , Frank Herbert's Children of Dune, and the British TV series Shameless....
     Actor, Last King of Scotland
  • Robert Muchamore
    Robert Muchamore

    Robert Kilgore Muchamore is an England author, most notable for writing the CHERUB and CHERUB#Henderson's Boys series....
    , author of the CHERUB
    Cherub

    A cherub is a form of angel mentioned several times in the Bible.Cherubs are described as winged beings. The biblical prophet Ezekiel describes the cherubim as a tetrad of living creatures, each having four faces: of a lion, an ox, an eagle, and a man....
     seires
  • Sheree Murphy
    Sheree Murphy

    'Sheree Murphy' , is an England actress and television presenter. A former student of the prestigious Italia Conti Academy, Murphy is best known for her role as Tricia Dingle in the long-running ITV soap opera Emmerdale and her appearance on the fifth series of the Reality TV show I'm a Celebrity......
    , actress was born here.
  • Joe Orton
    Joe Orton

    Joe Orton , born John Kingsley Orton, was an England playwright.In a short but prolific career lasting from 1964 until his death, he shocked, outraged and amused audiences with his scandalous black comedy....
    , playwright, lived and was murdered in a flat in Noel Road, Islington.
  • George Orwell
    George Orwell

    Eric Arthur Blair , better known by his pen name George Orwell, was an England author. His work is marked by a profound consciousness of social injustice, an intense dislike of totalitarianism, and a passion for clarity in language....
    , writer, lived at 50 Lawford Road and in a flat in Canonbury Square.
  • Nicky Spesh
    Nicky Spesh

    Nicky Spesh hails from North London, England. An emerging member of the British hip hop and Grime scene alongside the likes of Sway DaSafo. Nicky Spesh first became recognised when he freestyled over DJ Kool Herc's set at The Scala in London in 2002....
    , rapper, lives in Islington.
  • Stephen Poliakoff
    Stephen Poliakoff

    Stephen Poliakoff CBE is an acclaimed Great Britain playwright, director and scriptwriter, widely judged amongst Britain's foremost television dramatists....
    , award winning playwright.
  • Sir Walter Raleigh, writer, poet, courtier and explorer lived in Upper Street between 1575 and 1581.
  • Simon Rattle
    Simon Rattle

    Sir Simon Denis Rattle, Order of the British Empire, Royal Society of Arts, is an England Conducting. He rose to prominence as conductor of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, and is currently principal conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic ....
    , conductor who lived in Islington for a period
  • Linda Robson
    Linda Robson

    Linda Robson is an England actress. She is most famous for her role as Tracey in the BBC comedy, Birds of a Feather, which she played from 1989 to 1998 alongside Pauline Quirke....
    , actress well known for her role in the television series Birds of a Feather
    Birds of a Feather

    Birds of a Feather is a United Kingdom Situation comedy that aired on BBC One from 1989 to 1998. Starring Pauline Quirke, Linda Robson and Lesley Joseph, it was created by Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran, who also wrote some of the episodes along with many other writers....
  • Ronnie Ronalde
    Ronnie Ronalde

    Ronnie Ronalde is a British music hall singer and whistling. Ronalde is famous for his voice, whistling, yodelling, imitations of bird song and stage personality....
    , music hall
    Music hall

    Music hall is a form of British theatrical entertainment which was popular between 1850 and 1960. The term can refer to# A particular form of variety show entertainment involving a mixture of popular song, comedy and #Speciality Acts....
     performer famous for his singing, whistling, yodelling and imitations of bird song was born and raised in Islington. As a young boy, he performed informally in the streets of Islington on a number of occasions.
  • Jon Ronson
    Jon Ronson

    Jon Ronson is a Cardiff-born journalist, author, documentary filmmaker and radio presenter. His journalism and columns have appeared in British publications including The Guardian newspaper and Time Out magazine....
    , author, columnist, documentary maker.
  • Dana
    Dana Rosemary Scallon

    Dana Rosemary Scallon is better known simply as Dana, an Irish people and former politician. Her career began when, as an Advanced Level student, she won the Eurovision Song Contest 1970 with "All Kinds of Everything", a subsequent worldwide million-seller....
    , winner of the 1970 Eurovision Song Contest
  • Martin Shaw
    Martin Shaw

    Martin Shaw England actor.BackgroundShaw is the elder of two sons of an engineer. His mother was a competition standard ballroom dancer....
    , actor, who played Ray Doyle and Judge John Deed
    Judge John Deed

    Judge John Deed is a British legal drama television series produced by the BBC in association with One-Eyed Dog for BBC One. It was created by G.F....
    , etc., lived in Noel Road, including while starring in The Professionals
    The Professionals

    The Professionals or The Professional may refer to:*The Professional , a DJ Clue album*The Professionals , a 1970s British television series...
    .
  • Salman Rushdie
    Salman Rushdie

    Sir Ahmed Salman Rushdie is a British Indian novelist and essayist. He first achieved fame with his second novel, Midnight's Children , which won the Booker Prize in 1981....
    , writer who lived in Islington for a period
  • Ben Shephard
    Ben Shephard

    Ben Shephard is an England television presenter....
     TV Presenter, Lived in Islington 2001-2004
  • Sid Smith
    Sid Smith (writer)

    Sid Smith is an award-winning England novelist and journalist....
     novelist, journalist, lives in Islington
  • Peter Vowell
    Peter Vowell

    Peter Vowell was a schoolteacher executed as a Catholic and Cavalier conspirator.In May 1654 Vowell, from Islington, was arrested for his part in a plot to assassinate Oliver Cromwell as the Lord Protector and his guard of thirty mounted troops, travelled to Hampton Court....
    , Schoolteacher, executed for High Treason
    High treason

    High treason is criminal disloyalty to one's country. Participating in a war against one's country, attempting to overthrow its government, spying on its military, its diplomats, or its secret services for a hostile and foreign power, or attempting to kill its head of state are perhaps the best-known examples of high treason....
    .
  • Charlie Watts
    Charlie Watts

    Charles Robert "Charlie" Watts is the drummer of The Rolling Stones. He is also a jazz bandleader and commercial artist. Watts is sometimes referred to as "The Wembley Whammer" when introduced by Mick Jagger during a concert....
    , drummer of The Rolling Stones
    The Rolling Stones

    The Rolling Stones are an English rock music band formed in 1962 in London when multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones and pianist Ian Stewart were joined by vocalist Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richards....
    , was born and raised in Islington.
  • Frank Warren
    Frank Warren (promoter)

    Frank Warren is an England boxing manager and boxing promoter....
    , boxing promoter, was born in Islington
  • Jimmy Carr
    Jimmy Carr

    James Anthony Patrick "Jimmy" Carr, Jr. is an England comedian, author, actor and presenter of radio presenter and television presenter, known for his deadpan, satire and often very Black comedy....
    ,Comedian
  • Samuel West
    Samuel West

    Samuel West is a United Kingdom actor and theatre director....
    , actor.
  • Kenneth Williams
    Kenneth Williams

    Kenneth Charles Williams was a United Kingdom Comedy actor, star of 26 Carry On films and radio comedies with Tony Hancock and Kenneth Horne, as well as being a witty raconteur....
     (1926 - 1988), Actor, Comedian, Radio and Television Entertainer. One of the regulars on the popular Carry On
    Carry On films

    Carry On is a long-running film series of low-budget United Kingdom comedy films, directed by Gerald Thomas and produced by Peter Rogers. They are an energetic mix of parody, farce, slapstick and double entendres....
     Team, was born in Islington.
  • Kate Winslet
    Kate Winslet

    'Kate Elizabeth Winslet' is an English people Actor and occasional singing. She is noted for having played diverse characters over her career, but probably best-known for her critically acclaimed performances as Marianne Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility , Titanic #Cast in Titanic , Clementine Kruczynski in Eternal Sunshine of the Sp...
    , actress
  • Hugo Young
    Hugo Young

    Hugo John Smelter Young was a United Kingdom journalist and columnist and senior political commentator at The Guardian....
    , journalist, lived in Milner Square from the late 1960s until the mid 1980s
  • John Foxx
    John Foxx

    John Foxx is the stage name of England musician Dennis Leigh. He was the original lead singer of the band Ultravox, before embarking on a solo career in 1979....
    , electronic musician and first Ultravox
    Ultravox

    Ultravox are a British New Wave music band that rose to prominence in the late 1970s/early 1980s. They were one of the primary exponents of the British electronic pop music movement of the early 1980s....
     singer and frontman, lived there in the 1970s.
  • Jonas Grimås
    Jonas Grimås

    Jonas Grim?s is a London based Swedish film director. He started his education at Swedish film school, the Dramatiska Institutet 1987-89, and then The Royal College of Art....
    , film and television director
  • Ed O'Brien
    Ed O'Brien

    Edward John O'Brien is a member of Radiohead. He plays guitar and is responsible for harmony vocals during live concerts and on many tracks from the band's albums....
    , guitarist for the band Radiohead.
  • Shana Swash
    Shana Swash

    Shana Frances Swash is a United Kingdom actor best known for playing the role Demi Miller in the British television soap opera EastEnders. She is the younger sister of Joe Swash, who played her on-screen brother Mickey Miller....
     and Joe Swash
    Joe Swash

    Joseph Swash is a England actor who played Mickey Miller in the British television soap opera EastEnders. He is the older brother of Shana Swash, who played his on-screen younger sister Demi Miller until July 2006....
    , actress and actor of eastenders


Transport

The area is well served with bus routes, with a major bus interchange located near Angel tube station. Red route and residents' parking restrictions apply throughout the area.

Nearby places

  • Angel
    The Angel, Islington

    The Angel was originally an inn near a toll gate on the Great North Road , but now informally refers to this part of Islington in London. The corner itself is actually in Finsbury which was a separate borough until 1965 when the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury merged with the Metropolitan Borough of Islington to form the London Borough of...
  • Barnsbury
    Barnsbury

    Barnsbury is an area of north London in the London Borough of Islington, in the London N1 and London N7 UK postcodes.The name is a corruption of villa de Iseldon Berners , being so called after the Berners family, who gained ownership of the lands after the Norman Conquest and were powerful medieval manorial lords, owning a large part...
  • Canonbury
    Canonbury

    Canonbury is a residential district in the London Borough of Islington in the north of London. It is roughly in the area between Essex Road, Upper Street and Cross Street and either side of St Paul's Road....
  • De Beauvoir Town
    De Beauvoir Town

    De Beauvoir Town [de bo-vw?r' toun] is a district of the London Borough of Hackney, in North London. Its borders are Kingsland Road in the east, Southgate Road in the west, the Regents Canal in the south and Tottenham Road in the north....
  • Finsbury
    Finsbury

    Finsbury is a small district in the south of the London Borough of Islington and north of the City of London....
  • Highbury
    Highbury

    Highbury is an area in the London Borough of Islington....
  • Hoxton
    Hoxton

    Hoxton is an area in the London Borough of Hackney, immediately north of the financial district of the City of London. The area of Hoxton is bordered by Regents Canal on the north side, Wharf Road and City Road on the west, Old Street on the south, and Kingsland Road on the east....
  • Holloway
    Holloway, London

    Holloway is an inner-city district in the London Borough of Islington and follows for the most part, the line of the Holloway Road . At the centre of Holloway is the Nag's Head, London area....
  • Pentonville
    Pentonville

    Pentonville is an area of north-central London in the London Borough of Islington, centred on the Pentonville Road. Pentonville was part of the ancient parish of Clerkenwell, and was incorporated into the Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury by the London Government Act 1899....
  • St Luke's
    St Luke's

    St Luke's is an area in the London Borough of Islington in Greater London, close to the borders with the London Borough of Hackney and the City of London, near the Barbican Estate and Shoreditch....


Nearby stations

  • Angel tube station
    Angel tube station

    Angel tube station is a London Underground station in The Angel, Islington, Islington. It is on the Bank and Monument stations branch of the Northern Line, between Old Street station and King's Cross St....
  • Essex Road railway station
  • Highbury & Islington station
    Highbury & Islington station

    Highbury & Islington station is a National Rail, London Overground and London Underground station, in the London Borough of Islington in North London....


Education


For education in the area, see the London Borough of Islington
London Borough of Islington

The London Borough of Islington is a London borough in North London and Inner London. It was formed in 1965 by merging the former Metropolitan Borough of Metropolitan Borough of Islington and Metropolitan Borough of Finsbury....
 article.


Listed buildings

Grade II*

English Heritage
English Heritage

English Heritage is a non-departmental public body of the United Kingdom government with a broad remit of managing the historic built environment of England....
 lists three Grade II* listed buildings within Central Islington (and many more in surrounding districts):

  • The Union Chapel
    Union Chapel, Islington

    The Union Chapel is a Grade II listed church and music venue in Islington, North London. It is off Upper Street, near to Highbury and Islington station....
  • 3 Terrett's Place (An 18th-century house on Upper Street)
  • St Paul's Church, St Paul's Road (Designed by Sir Charles Barry, now the St Paul's Steiner
    Rudolf Steiner

    Rudolf Steiner was an Austrians philosopher, literary scholar, educator, architect, playwright, social thinker, and Esotericism. After gaining initial recognition as a literary critic and cultural philosopher, at the beginning of the twentieth century he founded a new spiritual movement, Anthroposophy, as an esoteric philosophy growing...
     Project)


Grade II (selected):

The area is perhaps most notable for its houses, shops and pubs. Many whole terraces are listed including much of Liverpool Road
Liverpool Road

Liverpool Road is located in the London Borough of Islington of inner north London. Liverpool Road runs parallel to A1 road #Upper Street and is largely made up of Georgian architecture. It starts at Upper Street and joins Holloway Road....
 (one side of which is in Barnsbury
Barnsbury

Barnsbury is an area of north London in the London Borough of Islington, in the London N1 and London N7 UK postcodes.The name is a corruption of villa de Iseldon Berners , being so called after the Berners family, who gained ownership of the lands after the Norman Conquest and were powerful medieval manorial lords, owning a large part...
) and Islington High Street/Upper Street
A1 road (London)

The A1 road in London is an A roads in Great Britain in North London. It runs from the London Wall to Bignell's Corner, where it crosses the M25 and becomes the A1 motorway, continuing to Edinburgh....
. Other multiply listed streets include Camden Passage
Camden Passage

File:Camden Passage in 2009.jpgCamden Passage is a pedestrian passage off Upper Street in the London Borough of Islington. The passage hosts an antique market on Wednesdays and Saturday mornings; it is also known for its many antiques shops....
, Compton Terrace, Colebrooke Row, Cross Street, Duncan Terrace, Essex Road, Gibson Square and Milner Square).

Other Grade II listed structures include:

  • The Almeida Theatre
    Almeida Theatre

    The Almeida Theatre, opened in 1980, is a 325 seat studio theatre with an international reputation which takes its name from the street in which it is located, off A1 road , in the London Borough of Islington....
    .
  • The Angel Baptist Church, Cross Street.
  • The Angel public house (the original one, now a Co-op bank - not the newer Wetherspoon's), Islington High Street.
  • The Business Design Centre
    Business Design Centre

    The Business Design Centre is an exhibition centre on A1 road #Upper Street in the district of Islington in London. It occupies a Grade II listed building formerly known as the Royal Agricultural Hall, which opened in c.1861 and was then one of the largest exhibition halls in the world....
     (part of which is the former Royal Agricultural Hall), Upper Street.
  • The Camden Head public house, Camden Passage.
  • The Hope and Anchor
    Hope and Anchor, Islington

    The Hope and Anchor is a public house on A1 road #Upper Street, in the London Borough of Islington. During the mid-1970s it was one of the first pubs to embrace the emergent, but brief, phenomenon of pub rock ....
     public house, Upper Street.
  • Islington Town Hall.
  • M Manze's Pie and Eel Shop, Chapel Market.
  • Mecca Bingo Hall (now closed), Essex Road (once the Carlton Cinema). This is due to become a church in the near future.
  • The Old Queen's Head public house, Essex Road.
  • St John's Church, Duncan Terrace.
  • St Mary's Church, Upper Street (rebuilt after World War 2 - only the spire remains from the original).
  • South Library, Essex Road.
  • The York public house.


See also

  • Almeida Theatre
    Almeida Theatre

    The Almeida Theatre, opened in 1980, is a 325 seat studio theatre with an international reputation which takes its name from the street in which it is located, off A1 road , in the London Borough of Islington....
  • Little Angel Theatre
    Little Angel Theatre

    The Little Angel Theatre is a puppet theatre catering for children, families and adults, off A1 road #Upper Street in the London Borough of Islington....
  • Business Design Centre
    Business Design Centre

    The Business Design Centre is an exhibition centre on A1 road #Upper Street in the district of Islington in London. It occupies a Grade II listed building formerly known as the Royal Agricultural Hall, which opened in c.1861 and was then one of the largest exhibition halls in the world....
  • Crafts Council
    Crafts Council

    The Crafts Council was established in 1971 as the national agency for crafts and was granted a Royal Charter in 1982. The Crafts Council?s vision is to position the UK as the global centre for the making, seeing and collecting of contemporary craft....
  • Islington Green
    Islington Green

    Islington Green is a small triangle of open land at the convergence of A1 road #Upper Street and Essex Road in the London Borough of Islington....
  • Market Estate
    Market Estate

    Market Estate is a public housing estate consisting of 271 apartment and maisonettes situated to the north of Caledonian Park in the London borough of Islington....
  • The Union Chapel
    Union Chapel, Islington

    The Union Chapel is a Grade II listed church and music venue in Islington, North London. It is off Upper Street, near to Highbury and Islington station....


External links