The surrounding streets were laid out in the 17th century on an intersecting grid pattern from north to south, east to west.[1] Baldwin Gardens was named after Baldwin, gardener to Queen Elizabeth I.[2] The street is shown on William Morgan's 1682 map of London.[3]
In the 17th century, as Baldwin's Gardens, the street offered sanctuary to debtors seeking to escape their creditors. John Noorthouck in A New History of London including Westminster and Southwark (1773) explained that several London localities had been used since the English Reformation as sanctuaries for debtors and no officers dared "without a hazard of their lives to arrest the lawless debtors who took refuge in them".[4] Baldwin's Gardens and other such areas were known as "pretended privileged places" but lost this status following the passing of the Escape of Debtors, etc. Act 1696.[5]
^Morgan, William; Morden, Robert; Lea, Philip (1682). London &c. Actually Surveyed(image) (Map) (1904 ed.). 1:3600. London: London Topographical Society. § 2. Retrieved 28 June 2023 – via Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division.
^Marsden, W. E. (4 August 2005). Unequal Educational Provision in England and Wales. Taylor & Francis. p. 34. ISBN9781135784096.
^Silver, Pamela; Silver, Harold (2013). The Education of the Poor The History of the National School 1824-1974. Taylor & Francis. p. 65. ISBN9781135030698.
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