91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Place    From 1329  To 1849

Marshalsea Prison

Categories: Law

Marshalsea Prison

Originally built to hold prisoners being tried by the Marshalsea Court and the Court of the King's Bench. Its first site, from at least 1329 was on Borough High Street on the block now bordered by Newcomen Street and Mermaid Court. The Marshalsea only became exclusively a debtors' prison in the mid 17th century. Never a model of cleanliness and godliness it was condemned in about 1800 and a new building was constructed on the site of the White Lion Prison (also called the Borough Jail or County Prison), at Angel Place where it was, for a time at least, alongside the King's Bench Prison. has the best map we have found showing the locations. The amount of land used by the second Marshalsea varied but at one time it was on either side of the alley. The two sides were very different, known as master-side and common-side, one was relatively clean and agreeable, the other was filthy and inhumane.

On this second site it served its function from 1811 until 1842 when the prisoners were transferred to the new Queen's Prison (a few streets away to the south-west) or, if considered mad, to Bedlam. Most of the buildings were demolished in 1849. In 1824 Charles Dickens' father was, for 12 weeks, one of the debtors imprisoned here. Consequently Marshalsea figures prominently in the Dickens novel Little Dorrit. Dickens remembered "In every respect indeed but elbow room the whole family lived more comfortably in prison than they had done for a long time out of it." has a good post about the Marshalsea.

This area of London certainly attracted prisons, presumably for the same reason that it, at one time, attracted theatres, bearpits and whorehouses - its "Goldilocks" proximity to the City, and it being outside the jurisdiction of both the Cities of London and Westminster.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

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

Commemorated ati

Marshalsea 1 - stone - round

Quoted from Chapter 3 of Little Dorrit.

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Marshalsea 2 - steel

The plaque refers to 'wall mounted artworks' but we did not see any on our vi...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Marshalsea 3 - stone - Little Dorrit

The heroine of Dickens' novel Little Dorrit was one resident who was not a pr...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Marshalsea 4 - stone - spiral

Quoted from Charles Dickens' preface to Little Dorrit.

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Marshalsea 5 - stone - at gates

This is our first push-me-pull-you plaque. It is in Angel Alley at the gates...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Show all 6

Other Subjects

Edgar Fay

Edgar Fay

Judge. Son of Sir Sam Fay.  He conducted inquiries into the collapse of the Crown Agents and the Munich air crash. The Telegraph have a photo.

Person, Law

1 memorial
Sir Montagu Sharpe, KBE, KC, DL

Sir Montagu Sharpe, KBE, KC, DL

Politician, lawyer, ornithologist and amateur archaeologist. Magistrate and Chairman of the Middlesex County Council. Born Paddington. Knighted in 1922 and became a Deputy Lord Lieutenant of Middle...

Person, Benefactor, History, Law, Politics & Administration, Romans

4 memorials
S. Lewis

S. Lewis

A commissioner of Limehouse Library and JP in 1900.

Person, Law, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
transportation to Australia

transportation to Australia

One of the (many) supposed origins of the word 'pom' for an Englishman, is that convicts were branded with the initials of 'Prisoner of Millbank'.

Event, Law, Transport, Australia

5 memorials
Peter Patrick James Kavanagh

Peter Patrick James Kavanagh

Lawyer. Killed in the Southall rail crash, aged 29. Peter Patrick James Kavanagh was born on 6 December 1967, the only child of Peter T. Kavanagh and Maureen Kavanagh née Jordan. According to Anne...

Person, Law, Tragedy

1 memorial