HOME WEB NEWS IMAGES CLASSIFIEDS YELLOW PAGESPOLLS - SURVEYS WIKI COUNTRIES PHOTOS US UK INDIA
Avoo.com provides meta search results from various sources

Soho


Google


News, World News by www.WorldOfNews.com
 Aida Edemariam learns how to swing - GuardianUnlimited 
 Theater Review | 'Blasted': Humanity Gets Only a Bit Part - TheNewYorkTimes 
 London, Oct 3 IANS World football is dogged yet again by racism. Monkey chants were directed at Emile Heskey in Zagreb last month and in another case, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has said Sol Campbell was subjected to racist abuse by Tottenham fans. - IANS.in 
 Kitchen gets a bit of SoHo in San Jose - TheMercuryNews 
 Dining goes digital at Inamo - ThisIsLonkdonCoUK 
 Josh Hartnett suing newspaper over 'sexual dalliance' claims - aniin.com 
 Accused Kirsten Dunst burglar gets 4 1/2 year jail term - aniin.com 
 Napapijri Teams up with Global Green USA to Open Soho Flagship and Educate About Global Warming - WireIMAGE 
 New kids on West End block - ThisIsLonkdonCoUK 
 No, it's not just another annoying Soho drunk, it's Rhys Ifans enjoying a drink or three - ThisIsLonkdonCoUK 
More >>


For the area in New York City, see SoHo. For other uses, see Soho (disambiguation).
Soho



Soho shown within Greater London
OS grid reference TQ295815
London borough Westminster
Ceremonial county Greater London
Region London
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town LONDON
Postcode district W1
Dialling code 020
Police Metropolitan
Fire London
Ambulance London
European Parliament London
UK Parliament Cities of London and Westminster
London Assembly West Central
List of places: UKEnglandLondon
Coordinates: 51°31′03″N 0°07′58″W / 51.517514, -0.132659

Soho is an area in the centre of the West End of London, England, in the City of Westminster. It is an entertainment district which for much of the later part of the 20th century had a reputation for its sex shops as well as its night life and film industry.http://www.viewlondon.co.uk/whatson/soho-london-feature-1710.html It has a long history of providing a range of eating places.

Contents

Geography

Soho is an area of approximately one square mile bounded by Oxford Street to the north, Regent Street to the west, Shaftesbury Avenue to the south and Charing Cross Road to the east. The area to the west is known as Mayfair, to the north Fitzrovia, to the east Holborn, St. Giles and Covent Garden, and to the south St James\'s. Chinatown and the area around Leicester Square can be considered as either just inside or just outside the southern edge of Soho.

Location in Context

Neighbouring areas of London.
North-West:
Marylebone
North:
Fitzrovia
North-East:
Bloomsbury
West:
Mayfair
Soho East:
Covent Garden
South-West:
St James\'s Park
South:
Chinatown
South-East:
Strand

History

The area which is now Soho was grazing farmland until 1536, when it was taken by Henry VIII as a royal park for the Palace of Whitehall. The name Soho first appears in the 17th century. Most authorities believe that the name derives from the old ‘soho!’ hunting call (Soho! There goes the fox!, etc.).\'Estate and Parish History\', Survey of London: volumes 33 and 34: St Anne Soho (1966), pp. 20-6 accessed: 17 May 2007 Adrian Room, A Concise Dictionary of Modern Place-Names in Great Britain and Ireland, page 113 John Richardson, The Annals of London, page 156 Brewer\'s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, page number varies according to edition The Duke of Monmouth used ‘soho’ as a rallying call for his men at the Battle of Sedgemoor, Arthur Mee, The King\'s England: London, page 233 half a century after the name was first used for this area of London.

In the 1660s the Crown granted Soho Fields to Henry Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans. He leased 19 of its 22 acres to Joseph Girle, who as soon as he had gained permission to build there, promptly passed his lease and licence to bricklayer Richard Frith in 1677, who began its development. In 1698 William III granted the Crown freehold of most of this area to William, Earl of Portland. Meanwhile the southern part of what became the parish of St Anne Soho was sold by the Crown in parcels in the 16th and 17th century, with part going to Robert Sidney, Earl of Leicester.

Despite the best intentions of landowners such as the Earls of Leicester and Portland to develop the land on the grand scale of neighbouring Bloomsbury, Marylebone and Mayfair, it never became a fashionable area for the rich, and immigrants settled in the area: the French church in Soho Square is witness to its position as a centre for French Huguenots in the 17th and 18th centuries. By the mid 1700s the aristocrats who had been living in Soho Square or Gerrard Street had moved away. Soho’s character stems partly from the ensuing neglect by rich and fashionable London, and its lack of development and redevelopment that characterizes its neighbouring areas.

By the mid 1800s all respectable families had moved away and prostitutes, music halls and small theatres had moved in. In the early 1900s foreign nationals opened cheap eating-houses and it became a fashionable place to eat for intellectuals, writers and artists. From the 1930s to the early 1960s, Soho folklore states that the pubs of Soho were packed every night with drunken writers, poets and artists, many of whom never stayed sober long enough to become successful; and it was also during this period that the Soho pub landlords established themselves.

The Soho name has been imitated by other entertainment and restaurant districts such as Soho, Hong Kong, SoHo, New York, and Palermo Soho, Buenos Aires.

Broad Street pump

Main article: John Snow (physician)

John Snow memorial, with John Snow pub shown in the background

A significant event in the history of epidemiology and public health was the study of an 1854 outbreak of cholera in Soho by Dr. John Snow.http://www.makingthemodernworld.org.uk/learning_modules/geography/05.TU.01/?section=2 He identified the cause of the outbreak as the public water pump located at the junction of Broad Street (now Broadwick Street) and Cambridge Street (now Lexington Street), close to the rear wall of what is today the John Snow public house.

John Snow mapped the addresses of the sick, and noted what they had in common was they were mostly people whose nearest access to water was the Broad Street pump. He persuaded the authorities to remove the handle of the pump, thus preventing any more of the infected water being collected. The spring below the pump was later found to be contaminated with sewage. This is an early example of epidemiology, public health medicine and the application of science—the germ theory of disease—in real time.Steven Johnson, The Ghost Map (The Story of London\'s Most Terrifying Epidemic and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World), Riverhead Books, New York 2006, pp.299

The 2006 appearance of the places related to the Broad Street Pump outbreak of cholera is described here:

"Almost every structure that stood on Broad Street in the late summer of 1854 has been replaced by something new - thanks in part to the Luftwaffe, and in part to the creative destruction of booming urban real estate markets. (Even the streets names have been altered. Broad Street was renamed Broadwick in 1936). The pump, of course, is long gone, though a replica with a small plaque stands several blocks from the original site on Broad Street. A block east of where the pump once stood is a sleek glass office building designed by Richard Rogers with exposed piping painted a bold orange; its glassed-in lobby hosts a sleek, perennially crowded sushi restaurant. St. Luke\'s Church, demolished in 1936, has been replaced by the sixties development Kemp House, whose fourteen stories house a mixed-use blend of offices, flats, and shops. The entrance to the workhouse on Poland Street is now a quotidian urban parking garage, though the workhouse structure is still intact, and visible from Dufours Place, lingering behind the postwar blandness of Broadwick Street like some grand Victorian fossil. (…) On Broad Street itself, only one business has remained constant over the century and half that separates us from those terrible days in September 1854. You can still buy a pint of beer at the pub on the corner of Cambridge Street, not fifteen steps from the site of the pump that once nearly destroyed the neighbourhood. Only the name of the pub is changed. It is now called The John Snow"Steven Johnson, The Ghost Map (The Story of London\'s Most Terrifying Epidemic and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World), Riverhead Books, New York 2006, pp.227-8.

A replica of the pump, with a memorial plaque, now stands near the location of the original pump.

Soho today

Soho is a small, multicultural area of central London; a home to industry, commerce, culture and entertainment, as well as a residential area for both rich and poor.

The Admiral Duncan pub, Soho landmark and site of the Soho nail-bombing

It is famous for its many clubs, pubs, bars, restaurants, the handful of sex shops scattered amongst them, and late-night coffee shops that give the streets an "open all night" feel at the weekends. Many Soho weekends are busy enough to warrant closing off of some of the streets to vehicles; Westminster Council pedestrianised parts of Soho in the mid-1990s, but later removed much of it, apparently after complaints of loss of trade from some local businesses.

There are record shops in the area around Berwick Street, where shops such as Blackmarket Records and Vinyl Junkies offer the latest releases. Soho is also the home of London\'s main gay village, around Old Compton Street, where there are dozens of businesses thriving on the pink pound. On April 30 1999, the Admiral Duncan pub on Old Compton Street, which serves the gay community, was damaged by a nail bomb planted by neo-Nazi David Copeland. It left three dead (two of whom were heterosexual) and 30 injured.

Soho is home to religious and spiritual groups, notably St Ann\'s Church on Dean Street (damaged by a V1 flying bomb during WW2, and re-opened in 1990), St Patrick\'s Church in Soho Square (founded by Irish immigrants in the 19th century), City Gates Church with their centre in Greens Court, the Hare Krishna Temple off Soho Square and a small mosque on Berwick Street.

Gerrard Street is the centre of London\'s Chinatown, a mix of import companies and restaurants (including Lee Ho Fook\'s, mentioned in Warren Zevon\'s song Werewolves of London). Street festivals are held throughout the year, most notably on the Chinese New Year.

On Valentine\'s Day 2006, a campaign was launched to bring business back into the heart of Soho. The campaign, called I Love Soho, features a community-focused web-site (www.ilovesoho.co.uk). The campaign was launched at the site of Raymond Revue Bar in Walkers Court, with celebrities such as Charlotte Church, Amy Winehouse and Paris Hilton. I Love Soho is backed by the Mayor of London Ken Livingstone, the Soho Society, Westminster Council and Visit London.

Theatre and film industry

Soho is near the heart of London\'s theatre area, and is a centre of the independent film and video industry as well as the television and film post-production industry. It is home to Soho Theatre, built in 2000 to present new plays and stand-up comedy. The British Board of Film Classification, formerly known as the British Board of Film Censors, can be found in Soho Square.

Soho is criss-crossed by a rooftop telecommunication network, and below ground level with fiber optics making up Sohonet, which connects the Soho media and post-production community to British film studio locations such as Pinewood Studios and Shepperton Studios, and to other major production centres such as Rome, New York City, Los Angeles, Sydney, and Wellington, New Zealand.

There are also plans by Westminster Council to deploy high-bandwidth Wi-Fi networks in Soho as part of a program to further encourage the development of the area as a centre for media and technology industries.

Soho and the sex industry

Agent Provocateur, 6 Broadwick Street

The Soho area has been at the heart of London\'s sex industry for at least 200 years. By the 1950s, the area had several brothels and by the 1970s, in an area stretching from Chinatown along Wardour Street, and up Old Compton Street, there were over 250 unlicensed sex shops, cinemas, clip joints and illegal bars, a large number of brothels, and many freelance prostitutes either soliciting on the street or offering their services from staircases with doors open to the street. The Metropolitan Police Vice squad at that time suffered from corrupt police officers involved with enforcing organised crime control of the area, but simultaneously accepting "back-handers" or bribes.

By the 1980s, purges of the police force along with a tightening of licensing controls by the City of Westminster led to a crackdown on these illegal premises. By 2000, a substantial relaxation of general censorship, and the licensing or closing of unlicensed sex shops had reduced the red-light area to just a small area around Brewer Street and Berwick Street. Several strip clubs in the area were reported in London\'s Evening Standard newspaper in February 2003 to be rip-offs (known as Clip joints), aiming to intimidate customers into paying for absurdly over-priced drinks and very mild \'erotic entertainment\'. Prostitution is still widespread in parts of Soho, with several buildings used as brothels, and there is a persistent problem with drug dealing on some street corners.

Soho has, however, never lost its hardy residential community; and it includes Soho Primary School on Great Windmill Street for local children. Its varied and cosmopolitan nature means that Soho does not have the character of a red light district.

The Windmill Theatre was notorious for its risqué nude tableaux vivants, in which the models had to remain motionless to avoid censorship.

Raymond Revuebar

The Raymond Revuebar was a small theatre specialising in striptease and nude dancing. It was owned by Paul Raymond and opened on 21 April, 1958. The most striking feature of the Revuebar was the huge brightly lit sign declaring it to be the "World Centre of Erotic Entertainment".

The name and control of the theatre (but crucially, not the property itself) was bought by Gerald Simi in 1997.http://www.megastar.co.uk/world/news/2004/03/11/sMEG01MTA3ODk5ODc4NjQ.html Gradually the theatre\'s fortunes waned, with Simi citing rising rent demands from Raymond as the cause.http://www.strip-magazine.com/mmagazine/new_welcome.php?subaction=showfull&id=1138828013&ucat=4

The Revuebar closed on June 10, 2004 and became a gay bar and cabaret venue called Too2Much. In November of 2006, it changed its name to Soho Revue Bar. The launch party included performances by Boy George, Anthony Costa, and Marcella Detroit.http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4153/is_200406/ai_n12080699

Education

For education in Soho see the main City of Westminster article.

In and around Soho

Streets

Map of Soho

Places

Neighbouring areas

Nearest tube stations

See also

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Soho

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


Advertise with Us | Search Marketing | Help | Suggest a Site | Privacy Policy
© 2008 www.avoo.com. All rights reserved.