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Building    To 1760

Aldgate

Categories: London Wall

Aldgate

Originally a Roman gate it was rebuilt a number of times:  1108–47, 1215, 1607-09, that last adding a statue of James I above the gateway. As a customs official Chaucer lived in the rooms above the gateway, 1374-86. The Cass Charity school used the upper floor as a children's dinning room in the 18th century.

The Aldgate was removed 1760 to allow for street widening, but it was reused. From : “Aldgate was bought by {Ebenezer} Mussell, of Bethnal Green, a zealous antiquary, who inhabited a house belonging to Lord Viscount Wentworth, built in the reign of James II. Mr. Mussell rebuilt the gate on the north side of his mansion, to which he henceforth gave the name of Aldgate House.”  Elsewhere, sadly, we learn that his widow remarried and her new husband cleared the site for redevelopment. The site is now occupied by the Church of Our Lady of the Assumption on Old Ford Road.

Our picture comes from the nearby No 5 of the lovely tiled London Wall Walk markers. It shows how the Roman Aldgate may have looked.

See Cripplegate for the full list of 8 gates of old London.

Sources include: .

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Aldgate

Commemorated ati

Aldgate

Site of Aldgate demolished 1760. The Corporation of the City of London

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Chaucer and Aldgate

This structure was removed between July 2014 and April 2015.

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Other Subjects

Bishopsgate

Bishopsgate

Originally Roman, rebuilt in 1471, again in 1735 and then demolished in 1760. See British History On-line for a drawing of the last gate). See Cripplegate for the full list of 8 gates of old London.

Building, London Wall

2 memorials
Medieval bastion

Medieval bastion

First conserved in 1959 by the Ministry of Works when it was in the basement of the then new General Post Office.  The picture source is a report by the developers of the current building. 

Building, London Wall

1 memorial
London Wall

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This Alan Eisen flickr page will take you on a walk of the Wall, showing many of the blue-bordered plaques. The Museum of London created a 2 mile long London Wall Walk in 1983, marked with 23 love...

Building, London Wall, Romans

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Moor Gate

Moor Gate

This gate was made in the London Wall early in the 15th century to allow access to Moor Fields, marshy moor-land outside the wall. By 1606 the area had been improved and became London's first publi...

Building, London Wall

1 memorial
Ludgate

Ludgate

Site was just to the west of St Martin's church. Rebuilt: 1215, 1450, 1586. 1666 destroyed in Great Fire and rebuilt in 1670 when a statue of the mythical King of the Britons, King Lud, was placed ...

Building, London Wall

2 memorials