Fann Street

It runs west-east, from its junction with Aldersgate Street and Goswell Road in the west, to the junction with Golden Lane in the east.

View from Aldersgate Street, looking down Fann Street
The immediate vicinity of Fann Street

Fann Street is a street in the City of London.

The name has no connection with the making of fans as is suggested by the plaque placed by the Worshipful Company of Fan Makers on the Jewin Chapel in this street, but in its original form of Fann's Alley the street was almost certainly named after a former owner or builder in the seventeenth century and a likely candidate is Stephen Fann, carpenter, whose will proved in 1613 says that he had property in the Precinct of 'Goswelstrete'.[1]

In 1802, Robert Thorne moved his type foundry to a former brewery in Fann Street, and renamed it the Fann Street Foundry. On his death in 1820, the business was bought by William Thorowgood.[2] Thorowgood created the typeface Grotesque. In 1838, the typographer Robert Besley, the creator of Clarendon the first patented typeface in 1845, joined the Fann Street Foundry.[3]

The former YMCA Building at 2 Fann Street has been renamed Blake Tower and has been redeveloped to create 72 luxury apartments.[4]

A history of the street and its former inhabitants has been provided by Anthony Camp in On the City's edge: a history of Fann Street, London (2016, ISBN 978-0-9503308-3-9).

References

  1. Anthony Camp, ″On the City's edge: a history of Fann Street, London" (2016) 7-8, 44.
  2. Macmillan, Neil (2006). An A-Z of type designers. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 171. ISBN 9780300111514.
  3. "Fann Street Clarendon". Moderntypography.com. Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  4. "Welcome". fannstreet.co.uk. Retrieved 10 July 2014.

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