Always amused me that they gave this name to - as you correctly point out - the SHORTEST street in York. Been causing headaches for mapmakers ever since...
One of the shortest streets in Berlin is ‘Thusnelda-Allee’, which sounds reasonable to English speakers but bizarre in German because ‘Allee’ usually means something like ‘boulevard’
@@daphnepk I remember being confused by that as a middle schooler, when my social studies texbook included a photo of Karl-Marx-Allee in East Berlin and it was this massive double road lined with grand buildings and greenspace.
Jago, that streets/gates/bars sentence has to be one of the most beautifully constructed opening lines I've ever heard you say - got me laughing out loud and I think a couple of my flatmates are now slightly concerned 😂
It's very good. :) The same sort of 3-item chain used to be heard years ago, but it's hard to make a really good one. I think Jago's is one of the best.
I went to York earlier this year and the tour guide I went around with made that joke. I think the river boat skipper may have too. Made me smile to hear it again here.
“And his employees already are entrenched at the corner of Whip-me-Whop-me Street at Mrs. Cresswell's old Flagellites Club." Aurelia raised her eyes. "Surely in such a sweet old house it would feel almost vulgar to be alive!” from Vainglory by Ronald Firbank, 1915.
Several years ago I did a sponsored “visit as many amusingly named streets in West Yorkshire in one day via public transport” for comic relief. Highlights included: Tickle Cock Bridge in Caslteford Bottoms in Halifax Titty Bottle Park in Otley Old Cock Yard in Halifax There were more but I can’t remember off the top of my head.
I see that you ended up on 'The Shambles'. The Shambles is mentioned in the Domesday Book as Butchers Street. The Shambles is one of the best preserved medieval streets in Europe. Formerly called the Fleshammels, the street of butchers: the shelves in front of the shop windows and the hooks above are for displaying meat, and the east-west line of the street and overhanging buildings meant the meat was in cool shade for most of the day. The shop dwellings used to have a yard at the rear for the slaughtering of cattle on the hoof. The Butcher's Hall is still at No.40. No.35 is Margaret Clitherow's House, now St. Margaret of York, she was a butcher's wife who was cruelly pressed to death in 1586 for hiding Jesuit priests in her house. This house is now a chapel to her memory. At the rear of The Shambles is an open market.
Most medieval towns had a street of butchers called a Shambles. I was in the shambles in Kendal earlier this week. It might be Norse derived, but I'm not sure of that.
A shambles was once the correct term for a butcher's block. Naturally a shambles would be covered in entrails from time to time - hence the colloquial usage for something messy. Calling a street full of butchers, The Shambles is a bit like calling a street full of bakers, The Oven.
The Domesday Book is all about land ownership and valuation. It lists who held the land in 1066, who has it in 1086, how much arable land, how many ploughs, mills and churches. It is just lists though - it doesn't identify locations or give the names of streets.
Not a place name - it derives from "flesh shammel" - literally "meat shelf" - which became a term for a butcher's shop and, since in those days butchers killed animals on their premises, a slaughterhouse and by extension a bloody mess.
Ooh, travel! You're really going places, you. And as a language nerd, thank you for including the small note about the origin of this sense of "gate" in English.
And the winner of the award for the "how many panning shots of the same street scene from different angles can you permutate...?" Goes to Jo Go Hazzard!
Back in '68 the Bash Street Kids did a walking tour of Britain, visiting actual places, which appeared in about twenty successive issues of the Beano. One episode ended on this very street, with Teacher administering a well-deserved whacking to them all, right next to the sign. (You wouldn't be allowed to print that now.)
I now live in Yorkshire and visit York regularly having been born in Balham well over 60 years ago. One of the strangest street names in Yorkshire has to be The Land of Green Ginger in Hull which was the name given to one of the new Hull Trains class 800 units. Keep the videos coming, they are always interesting and often amusing
@@horsenuts1831 Seeing that name brought many memories of wandering around there on a lunch time break from doing my "tickets" at Queens Gardens Nautical College. 🙂
Excellent as always Mr Hazzard. I have a few suggestions, also that may be of some interest. In Leigh, Lancashire, buses had a destination of "Dangerous Corner." In Accrington, also in Lancashire, they went to "Load of Mischief". In Marsden, there's a "Hard End" and near Pilling in Lancashire, is my personal favourite, .... 'Skronkey'. The sign is now twenty foot up on a barn wall, as visitors kept nicking the signs. And in Stalybridge, near Manchester, there's two pubs, now virtually next to each other, one with the longest pub name in the country and virtually next door, the one with the shortest. One is "The Old Thirteenth Cheshire Astley Volunteer Rifleman Corps Inn", whilst the other is simply called "Q". Cheers. .
The original name of Grope Lane in Shrewsbury had an extra four letters on the back of the first part. Apparently it described the nefarious activity that took place along that land. The missing letters were anagram of the shortened form of a Danish king called Canute.
Jewry in London was also called Gropecanute Lane in the Middle Ages. There were plenty of those up and down the country for designated red light areas.
most cities and older towns in the north of England have the -gate suffix for major central streets; for instance, the two main roads in Wakefield city centre are Westgate and Kirkgate, which also give their names to the two central railway stations (the two suburban stations being Outwood in the north, and in the south, the wonderfully named Sandal and Agbrigg)
This is why I tend to call Eastgate Street, Westgate Street etc. in Gloucester simply "Westgate", "Eastgate" etc. Even though I know it's not the same etymology (it's based on the gates of the Roman fortification).
@@chrisamies2141 Yep, it could get confusing as most times I see "gate" I assume that it was a route through an old wall. Does depend on the area though as the suffix "bury" comes from fort/fortified house which was inevitably the local lord's place and this can still be seen in many areas where clusters of tiny villages or hamlets have the suffix "bury" with minor changes to the first part
Jago, I saw your recent v interesting upload on the Epping/Ongar heritage route. There's a tiny alley in Epping, near the high st called Twankhams Alley - sounds like it was influenced by a certain Panto Dame?
I'd like to know the story behind "Cum Cum Hill" on the B158 near Hatfield. There's a Cucumber Lane sticking out of it, which not only invokes some... interesting... mental imagery, but also makes me wonder whether the two names have a common origin.
I remember Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate from years ago. The company I worked for used to have a customer with that address. I saw it once much later and couldn't believe how short the street was, but by then, our customer had ceased trading.
If you come to Hull, you'll come across Land of Green Ginger, which is also a very short street with various interpretations of its name. Despite its shortness, it also has what is reputedly the smallest window in England/Europe/the World!
In Headington, on the outskirts of Oxford, there is the admirably-named Toot Hill Butts, and sightly closer to home, in Bicester, we have Crumps Butts. Your video about archery locations should explain the second half of both names to those who know not what it means.
Bicester always makes me think of biscuits and Bisto at the same time. Although my version of biscuits and gravy would be vastly different to what an American would expect!
Love it! There are lots of great street and place names out there. Silly London ones: Bird in Bush Lane in Peckham - why is it called that, and it sounds vaguely sapphic if your mind works like mine Near St George's Hospital in Tooting there is a Recovery Street and an Effort Street, and they are linked. Does recovery require effort, and if you fail to recover should you have put in more effort? St George's has not been in Tooting that long, but it was built on the site of previous hospitals. Some kind of Victorian morality?
My ancestors came from Spittal-in-the Street in Lincolnshire. On further investigation I found that it was a village rather than an actual street. But 185 years after they left, I like to think that they chose to emigrate to Melbourne because it was as far away as possible from their embarrassingly named home town.
Interesting street names, you ask? Well in my home town of Bicester there is a street on the edge of the town centre - which can be best described as two cul-de-sacs linked by an alleyway - called Crumps Butts. (It passes round the back of my local pub, the Bell...) ...As a bit of aside there is also a street in my birth-town of Banbury called Parsons street, which may not be that interesting, but it connected to Banbury castle (No longer there), which was a besieged royalist stronghold during the civil war, and Oliver Cromwell stayed at an inn halfay along the street which still exists today (The Old Reindeer). Apparently back then it was a red-light area and called Gropec**t lane!
From New England, I loved this video. I've been through York a few times while on the train from Edinburgh to London, but never had time to explore the city. It looks very nice. Definitely on my bucket list for a future trip.
I second making a visit. I did 3 days there. I spent an entire day at the Railway Museum. The Minster has a couple of different tours available, including one where you can climb to the top of the tower and get a 10 or 20 mile view. There are also the ruins of the former Abbey.
@@Krzyszczynski which races are those? I was there only a short time, but never once heard anyone mention some sort of annual races that take place in the area.
I think my favourite is Menlove Avenue in Liverpool because it sounds like the punchline to a joke. Someone once made a deliberate decision to call it "Avenue" rather than "Road" or "Lane", and I salute them.
There's always the classic sign tampering shenanigans on Canal Street in the Gay Village in Manchester, where people hide the letters to form "anal treet" lol.
Avenues have trees. There are also rules for whether a road is a street or a road (although mine was once one and now is the other - without anything chaging - it also has trees, but isn't an avenue!). I can't remember the details, but it's on Wikipedia, so it must be true.
There's a very short street, possibly shorter than Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate, down here in Southsea, at one end of which is the sea. It previously didn't have a name, but was given one to honour local lad Neil Gaiman: it's called The Ocean At The End Of The Lane.
There's a "Needless alley" in Brum which always makes me chuckle. Especially the thought of someone going to the trouble of making a sign for a needless alley
I lived in England from 1979 to 1981. One of the things we enjoyed were walking tours around London. There were many to choose from and one that stands out was a tour of the east end--learned all about Cockney rhyming slang and other things. The tour guide was explaining that many streets were named after what was sold there. Bread was sold in Bread Street. Milk was sold in Milk Street and so on. You should have seen the look on the tour guide's face when my mother pointed to the sign for Love Street.
That would be the cleaned up version. When Jago mentioned Grope Lane, historically there's a 4 letter word, starts with C, ends with T, one vowel , in-between Grope and Lane. No, not cart or cult, although the latter is only 2 letters out.
I would recommend the “ Lesser Spotted Britain” range of stuff online. There’s plenty of stuff to like. The book Far from Dull is a great read and explains why some places have odd names.
Broad Pavements might not sound very interesting, but it's the narrowest driveable road in Chesterfield. It's also quite apart from all the other Pavements, giving the impression that it was named quite deliberately. This isn't quite a name thing, but in Goring-by-Sea, Worthing, part of the very long Ilex Avenue runs down the middle of the very quiet dual carriageway, Ilex Way. (Goring has a lot of very quiet dual carriageways. It's all rather nice.) Ilex Way itself is an unmade track, but it's a very unusual one: it's far too straight to be a traditional right of way, and Ilex Way doesn't seem like a traditional Sussex name at all. It's a very Anglo-Saxon part of the world where traditional names generally have a very earthy feel, but Ilex Way is a very gentrified sort of name. Why then is it neither manicured like a park nor metalled for motor-cars? I don't know, but I do think it's better the way it is.
@@gazbrucia1654 Eh, Low Pavements is just kind-of downhill, though I guess the name might have another meaning. Knifesmithgate seems like a cool name, but it's not really any stranger than Saltergate. Glumangate though... I think I should have suggested Glumangate. :)
Chesterfield has some strange names, when i drive from Alfreton to Chesterfield there is DEEPSICK LANE. And near the National grid substation is cock alley.
I once dated someone whose father was brought up in 1.3/4 Intown Row. So far as I know, this was exactly like Flat C etc these days, but the numbering system used on Intown Row dated from the turn of the 19th/20th Centuries at the latest, likely mid-19th Century. I believe there was a 1.1/4 and a 1.1/2, but how many of the other numbers on the street were similarly fractionalised I don't know.
@@thisnicklldo might be similar to some of the scottish tenaments buildings (I have only ever been to the black country museum where I think there were a form of terraced houses - round a courtyard ?
@@highpath4776 I understand such arrangements did exist in the area, though I've never seen it, but this particular case was just a row of terraced houses, now demolished. I believe that each of the 4 houses had separate entrances from the street, and had numbers on the doors to suit. How they got like that I never really found out. The chap in question left there when he was young-ish, so that would have been just pre-WW2, so he might not have remembered. It's possible that 1 and 1.1/2 were as originally built, then economic pressures caused subdivision of each half. It's also possible that the plot was undeveloped for a period after the street was built but still given its number, then the developer decided to put a terrace of 4 small houses on the site. I'm afraid I don't know whether next door had 2, 2.1/4, 2.1/2, 2.3/4 etc. Certainly the houses were tiny, with very narrow rooms and I think 1 room at the front, some sort of kitchen/scullery at the back, and I guess 2 rooms on the 1st floor - definitely no bathrooms, of course. It came up in discussion as an illustration of the relative poverty of his upbringing.
Nicely done as always! I... seem to vaguely recall from my travels abroad (I am, quite sadly, now stuck in a small town in the American South, and it's pretty awful here) that there is either a street or place-name in London that is "St. Johns By The Loo". I distinctly remember my mother and I looking at the sign, looking at each other, giggling uproariously, and simultaneously spouting off with, "Only in London!".
Whato Jago, An entertaining piece as always. Did you know Nottingham is full of streets called gate such as Bridlesmith Gate (Nottingham was one of the five boroughs of Danelaw). The city also has a tramway so perhaps it’s time to visit Nottingham.
There's a street in Workington called Pow Street and I've always hoped that you might get to it via Zap Avenue which is just round the corner from Splat Gardens.
I once heard of a street called Bell End. When I last saw it, it led to a place called Knob Hill. But it was in the middle of a construction site, which had levelled the hill, meaning it no longer existed. Such a shame. Would have made for a great video here.
Not a street, but there's a place just outside Bolton in a place called Little Lever on the Manchester, Bolton and Bury Canal called Nob End. It's the site of a rather large flood where the canal retaining wall collapsed and it all washed down the hill into the river Irwell. The canal at that part is still empty to this day.
Catte Street in Oxford was sanitised to Catherine Street by the Victorians, but got its original name back in the 20th century. Apparently 'Cat' was mediaeval/early modern slang for a lady of purchasable virtue.
Here in Worcestershire we have got Minge Lane in Upton on Severn. Just down the road we've got Lickey End and also Bell End - it's like living on the set of a Carry on film!
I used to live on a Horsewater Wynd in Dundee. There is of course "The Street with No Name" in Levenshulme, Manchester; Ham Yard in Soho, London; Grisleymires Lane, Milnthorpe, Westmorland. My personal all time favourite address has to be Stank Farm, Stank Road, Stank, Barrow-in-Furness.
there is HA HA road in Woolwich..Drunken Drove in Great Massingham and places called Pratts Bottom[London] Sexhow [Nth Yorkshire]and Shitterton in Scotland!
Ha-ha Jago, in fact Ha-ha Road in Greenwich, I believe featured in one of The Tim Traveller’s videos. So what’s so ha-ha? A 'ha ha' is a sunken ditch which serves as a boundary marker for property, rather than a high wall that could block the landowner's view. (Ok I Googled the last part) Best wishes from Oxfordshire, where in Oxford City there is a “Magpie Lane.” Previous to that name, I believe it had another name. I’ll leave it there for obvious reasons. There is still Crotch Crescent and Titup Hall Drive to amuse those with a certain type of humour (not me though 😂)
There's also St-Louis-du-Ha! Ha!, Quebec (three hyphens, not four - marks will be lost on Trivia Night if you get this wrong), the only place in the world with two exclamation marks in its name.
The original name was Gropec**t lane, so called because it was the centre for prostitution in Oxford. Many towns and cities had a Grope or Gropec**t lane or street. Here in Worcester, the Technical College ( now Heart of Worcestershire College) was built on top of Grope Lane.
As far as whimsical street/thoroughfare names go, I quite like Christmas Steps in Bristol; Pedestrian Diversions here on youtube has a video on it where its history and etymology are covered
When i worked in the cambridge telephone exchange with a bunch of dislocated londoners, one of them told me the tale of, I think, a group of streets in london, called "King, William, The, Fourth, Of, Orange". Each part had a street - so somewhere in london is supposedly a mythical "of street". I couldn't find it in my trust 80s A-Z. But I did find King, William and IIRC The streets. It sounds like the kind of thing you might find intriguing... Note: i may have the saying slightly wrong. It's King William the something of something. I think it was fourth of orange, though that doesn't make a huge amount of historical sense. Just to clarify - this is half remembered trivia from the early 90s, so I'm sorry for being vague.
Not quite a street but a video of the Ye Olde Mitre pub near Chanery Lane and its weird Cambridgeshire postcode would be a good recommendation. Actually, you could do a whole video on the Chancery name and where those weird legal names come from.
There's a Blue Boar Alley In 1:32 Aldgate, London , which according to local rumour used to be known as Gropec*** Lane, apparently due to some activity that went on there.
Once upon a time, when I first moved down to the West Country, I used to spend many hours discovering the delights of the area by means of old OS maps …. And I was always particularly fond of Scratchy Bottom in Dorset. I have since studied the newer (metric) series maps and can no longer find it. I do hope it has not been lost to time.
Whip-ma-whop-ma sounds a bit like "Ek weet nie wat nie" in Afrikaans - which basically means "I don't know what". Similar to "Not one thing or another". York is a fantastic place - being whisked around the city in a couple of hours as I was by my tour group barely scratched the surface. It seems like every other building there is a museum of some kind.
Not one thing or another road. Adds a bit of je ne sais quoi to an address. Or not. There is a Knightrider Street in EC4 and Bell End in Rowley Regis. Theres a Fanny Hands Lane in Ludford in Lincolnshire and a Squeeze Guts Alley in Truro . What a colourful place we live in.
I was brought up in York. As a child my Mother would take me on a weekly shop in York. Our route included Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate. We would walk along the alley from The Shambes behind St Crux Church. At the Shambles end there is a sign directing you towards Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate, so I always thought the alley was Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate. Anybody know what this alley is actually called ? Until The Stonebow was open in 1960s, Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate was a major bus route. Buses had to turn left from Pavement then immediately right into St Saviourgate, in both directions. A real bottleneck.
Hull has “The Land of Green Ginger” which is named after a hub. I found out about this from The Orb track “The Land of Green Ginger” which was the title of a children’s book named after it, which was read by Kenneth Williams on Jackanory in the sixties. Oh, how I’d love to see those episodes again. It is supposed to be a sequel to Aladdin, seemingly they are two versions of it, the second purportedly devolving into something not that good. But anything that talks about a “portable back garden” has to be good.
Living not that far from York I have visited this street on quite a number of occasions and was aware of the name Whip-ma Whop-ma Gate but I had never connected the two... Not really silly, more quirky- "Land of Green Ginger" in Hull is my favourite street name.
In short, another great video thanks Jago you certainly whipped up a good one. Love York, especially this area, was there again only a couple of weeks ago.
Magpie Lane in Oxford was once the Red Light District. Had a much more descriptive name back then, when the name included what was once an anatomical definition; but now is used to describe a parking enforcement officer
As an equestrian, all I can say is this is unlikely, given the amount of space necessary for handling horses. I think you'd struggle to fit many horses on Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate, and if there'd been, say, a blacksmith there, it would have most likely been named for that. Given the prior name, you're more likely looking at a case of the street name being bastardized over time. The "neither one thing nor the other" translation certainly fits to describe a street, that honestly likely never saw much use besides as a thoroughfare between other streets.
In my old hometown,there is a street/road,called Skunks Misery,and its one of our back to earthy names! And that post from Connecticut,I found that there's one there too! By the way,this tidbit is from Long Island[NY],and on the North Shore of Nassau County! Oh,yes,and we have some place names of Dutch origin,dating from the 1600's! Plus some Indian names,to fill in the gaps!! Thank you 😇 😊!!
@@alexhajnal107 Including a lot with the prefix "kill", which is Dutch for a small stream. Hence Fresh Kills (streams with freshwater) on Staten Island, New York, which was once one of NYC's main landfills. So perhaps a lot of Mafia-generated "fresh kills" ended up in Fresh Kills.
@@andyjay729 Yea. There's also _dorp_ (village), _zee_ (sea/large lake), _meer_ (lake), _hook_ ( _hoek_ : spit/peninsula/corner), and _vlei_ or _vly_ (wetland). Coney Island comes from _konijn_ (rabbit). There's also Harlem, Flushing, Amsterdam, etc. (cities/towns), the Bronx, van Cortlandt, etc. (people). The list is endless.
There is Bell End and Mincing Ln, in Rowley Regis West Midlands. The first one there was a bell foundry, but I'm not sure about the second one. Also, there is a Hawes land
That wee church, St. Crux, is well worth a visit. Charities make use of it regularly and do teas, cakes and sarnies. Sometimes there's bric a brac stalls outside. It's jolly nice inside too with plaques in Latin and English of a time where the choice of J's and 1's and s's and f's were arbitrary. Thare's a large colourful tomb by the wall eulogising the deceased in glowing 16th C script. The stained glass window is pretty amazing from the inside- just as glowing. Photography from the outside does not do it justice. Opp St. Crux is The Golden Fleece, variously given as the most haunted anywhere. It certainly had Yvette Fielding bleeping like a trooper (I think The Other Side deserves better media, existential conundrums not withstanding) but it does a nice pint and I'm pretty open minded about the strange shadows I saw on the CCTV. I suppose for those beyond the veil old habits die hard too. The last time I was in York, it was the day that two suspiciously unconnected events happened. One was the removal of viagra from prescription in England and the other was the introduction of per unit alcohol pricing in Scotland where the former is free and the latter had just got dearer.
Always amused me that they gave this name to - as you correctly point out - the SHORTEST street in York. Been causing headaches for mapmakers ever since...
One of my favourites is Ulitsa Daleka in Swidnica, Poland - "Dalek Street"... perhaps this could be somewhere for you to cover on your travels?
One of the shortest streets in Berlin is ‘Thusnelda-Allee’, which sounds reasonable to English speakers but bizarre in German because ‘Allee’ usually means something like ‘boulevard’
@@peterrivet648 I am reliably informed that "daleko" in Polish means something like "far away".
@@daphnepk I remember being confused by that as a middle schooler, when my social studies texbook included a photo of Karl-Marx-Allee in East Berlin and it was this massive double road lined with grand buildings and greenspace.
@@hb1338 and "fart" in Polish mean luck ;)
Jago, that streets/gates/bars sentence has to be one of the most beautifully constructed opening lines I've ever heard you say - got me laughing out loud and I think a couple of my flatmates are now slightly concerned 😂
It's very good. :) The same sort of 3-item chain used to be heard years ago, but it's hard to make a really good one. I think Jago's is one of the best.
Variations of it appear on postcards and the like, at least they did when I was a student in York in the 90s.
Agreed !:-)
I went to York earlier this year and the tour guide I went around with made that joke. I think the river boat skipper may have too. Made me smile to hear it again here.
I'm fairly sure I've heard it in another video, maybe a York Video - it's not original.
“And his employees already are entrenched at the corner of Whip-me-Whop-me Street at Mrs. Cresswell's old Flagellites Club."
Aurelia raised her eyes.
"Surely in such a sweet old house it would feel almost vulgar to be alive!”
from Vainglory by Ronald Firbank, 1915.
Flagellites club? Definitely somewhere one could find a Tory MP being "ridden", then!
Several years ago I did a sponsored “visit as many amusingly named streets in West Yorkshire in one day via public transport” for comic relief.
Highlights included:
Tickle Cock Bridge in Caslteford
Bottoms in Halifax
Titty Bottle Park in Otley
Old Cock Yard in Halifax
There were more but I can’t remember off the top of my head.
*Castleford.
@@TerryTheNewsGirl you’d think of all of them, I’d spell my home town correctly lol 😂 whoops! I was typing fast that’s my excuse lol 😂
@@prettypinkwitchlaura9213 Should you wish, I am available as a proof reader. Reasonable rates apply. 😀
I like the modern silly street name of Letsby Avenue in Tinsley, Sheffield - home of South Yorkshire Police! Town planners required - GSOH essential.
I was really disappointed it wasn't number 999 Letsby Avenue but hey can't have everything 😋😋
In St Ives, no not that one, the one in Cambridgeshire, the police station is on Pig Lane.
@@RGChandler Near where I live, someone who lived opposite the police station manes their house Copper View
And Watford Police Station is on Shady Lane!
Boringly, the South Yorkshire Police don't have it as part of their address. It's Europa Link.
I see that you ended up on 'The Shambles'.
The Shambles is mentioned in the Domesday Book as Butchers Street. The Shambles is one of the best preserved medieval streets in Europe. Formerly called the Fleshammels, the street of butchers: the shelves in front of the shop windows and the hooks above are for displaying meat, and the east-west line of the street and overhanging buildings meant the meat was in cool shade for most of the day. The shop dwellings used to have a yard at the rear for the slaughtering of cattle on the hoof.
The Butcher's Hall is still at No.40. No.35 is Margaret Clitherow's House, now St. Margaret of York, she was a butcher's wife who was cruelly pressed to death in 1586 for hiding Jesuit priests in her house. This house is now a chapel to her memory. At the rear of The Shambles is an open market.
Never new that 'shambles' was derived from a real place name. I know that 'bedlam' was, though.
Most medieval towns had a street of butchers called a Shambles. I was in the shambles in Kendal earlier this week. It might be Norse derived, but I'm not sure of that.
A shambles was once the correct term for a butcher's block. Naturally a shambles would be covered in entrails from time to time - hence the colloquial usage for something messy. Calling a street full of butchers, The Shambles is a bit like calling a street full of bakers, The Oven.
The Domesday Book is all about land ownership and valuation. It lists who held the land in 1066, who has it in 1086, how much arable land, how many ploughs, mills and churches. It is just lists though - it doesn't identify locations or give the names of streets.
Not a place name - it derives from "flesh shammel" - literally "meat shelf" - which became a term for a butcher's shop and, since in those days butchers killed animals on their premises, a slaughterhouse and by extension a bloody mess.
Ooh, travel! You're really going places, you. And as a language nerd, thank you for including the small note about the origin of this sense of "gate" in English.
And the winner of the award for the "how many panning shots of the same street scene from different angles can you permutate...?" Goes to Jo Go Hazzard!
Or is that GoPro Jo Hazzard?
"This video is sponsored by DPD"
We have a road called Thornydyke Ave in Bolton. I don't think I've ever seen the street sign without someone painting over the letter T.
Back in '68 the Bash Street Kids did a walking tour of Britain, visiting actual places, which appeared in about twenty successive issues of the Beano. One episode ended on this very street, with Teacher administering a well-deserved whacking to them all, right next to the sign. (You wouldn't be allowed to print that now.)
I now live in Yorkshire and visit York regularly having been born in Balham well over 60 years ago. One of the strangest street names in Yorkshire has to be The Land of Green Ginger in Hull which was the name given to one of the new Hull Trains class 800 units. Keep the videos coming, they are always interesting and often amusing
Thats also the title of a memorably fantastic 1937 children's book by Noel Langley that I remember being on Jackanory when I was a kid
Pocket Handkerchief Lane in Rotherham is another silly Yorkshire one.
Being from a Hull family, yes, The Land Of Green Ginger HAS to be the best street name in the World.
I was born in Balham, gateway to the south, 70++ years ago!
@@horsenuts1831 Seeing that name brought many memories of wandering around there on a lunch time break from doing my "tickets" at Queens Gardens Nautical College. 🙂
Excellent as always Mr Hazzard.
I have a few suggestions, also that may be of some interest.
In Leigh, Lancashire, buses had a destination of "Dangerous Corner."
In Accrington, also in Lancashire, they went to "Load of Mischief".
In Marsden, there's a "Hard End" and near Pilling in Lancashire, is my personal favourite, .... 'Skronkey'. The sign is now twenty foot up on a barn wall, as visitors kept nicking the signs.
And in Stalybridge, near Manchester, there's two pubs, now virtually next to each other, one with the longest pub name in the country and virtually next door, the one with the shortest.
One is "The Old Thirteenth Cheshire Astley Volunteer Rifleman Corps Inn", whilst the other is simply called "Q".
Cheers.
.
The original name of Grope Lane in Shrewsbury had an extra four letters on the back of the first part. Apparently it described the nefarious activity that took place along that land.
The missing letters were anagram of the shortened form of a Danish king called Canute.
There's a Grape Lane right in York that had a similar change of name.
Jewry in London was also called Gropecanute Lane in the Middle Ages. There were plenty of those up and down the country for designated red light areas.
Grope-cane Lane. Really ?!
@@egbront1506 "designated" - somehow I think not. More likely "de facto".
@@hb1338 Both, if historical records are to be believed; tolerated in some parts, regulated in others.
most cities and older towns in the north of England have the -gate suffix for major central streets; for instance, the two main roads in Wakefield city centre are Westgate and Kirkgate, which also give their names to the two central railway stations (the two suburban stations being Outwood in the north, and in the south, the wonderfully named Sandal and Agbrigg)
This is why I tend to call Eastgate Street, Westgate Street etc. in Gloucester simply "Westgate", "Eastgate" etc. Even though I know it's not the same etymology (it's based on the gates of the Roman fortification).
@@chrisamies2141 Yep, it could get confusing as most times I see "gate" I assume that it was a route through an old wall. Does depend on the area though as the suffix "bury" comes from fort/fortified house which was inevitably the local lord's place and this can still be seen in many areas where clusters of tiny villages or hamlets have the suffix "bury" with minor changes to the first part
Kirkgate , found in Leeds, Bradford, and Huddersfield. Kirk means church.
Jago, I saw your recent v interesting upload on the Epping/Ongar heritage route. There's a tiny alley in Epping, near the high st called Twankhams Alley - sounds like it was influenced by a certain Panto Dame?
Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma,
Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma,
Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma,
Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma,
In the jungle, the mighty jungle, the lion sleeps tonight!
LOL nice one!
Well done...
THAT'S LITERALLY THE FIRST THING I THOUGHT OF 😭😭😭
I'd like to know the story behind "Cum Cum Hill" on the B158 near Hatfield. There's a Cucumber Lane sticking out of it, which not only invokes some... interesting... mental imagery, but also makes me wonder whether the two names have a common origin.
There’s a Cumwell Lane close to J1 of the M18
Always fun to see you in York, my home before I got sucked down to London and started watching all your videos
Great video! Missed the opportunity of thanking your donors with "You're the whip to my whop" unfortunately, though...
Excellent..you are "streets" ahead of other youtubers..and a good idea to "address" this subject.
I remember Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate from years ago. The company I worked for used to have a customer with that address. I saw it once much later and couldn't believe how short the street was, but by then, our customer had ceased trading.
If you come to Hull, you'll come across Land of Green Ginger, which is also a very short street with various interpretations of its name. Despite its shortness, it also has what is reputedly the smallest window in England/Europe/the World!
In Cornwall there's Drippy Droppy in Helston, Stippy Stappy in St Agnes and Knave-Go-By near Cambourne
And for fans of Essex try Pig's Head in the Pottage Pot Gant, Braintree and Dancing Dicks Lane Witham.
In Headington, on the outskirts of Oxford, there is the admirably-named Toot Hill Butts, and sightly closer to home, in Bicester, we have Crumps Butts. Your video about archery locations should explain the second half of both names to those who know not what it means.
Bicester always makes me think of biscuits and Bisto at the same time. Although my version of biscuits and gravy would be vastly different to what an American would expect!
Is there still a crotch crescent in Oxford?
Love it! There are lots of great street and place names out there.
Silly London ones:
Bird in Bush Lane in Peckham - why is it called that, and it sounds vaguely sapphic if your mind works like mine
Near St George's Hospital in Tooting there is a Recovery Street and an Effort Street, and they are linked. Does recovery require effort, and if you fail to recover should you have put in more effort? St George's has not been in Tooting that long, but it was built on the site of previous hospitals. Some kind of Victorian morality?
Every single one of those place names is a double-entendre.
@@alexhajnal107 Most of the comments are!
@@CarolineFord1 Peckham? I hardly know him!
Jago throws down a challenge for craziest and best named streets in the world!
Challenge accepted.
My ancestors came from Spittal-in-the Street in Lincolnshire. On further investigation I found that it was a village rather than an actual street. But 185 years after they left, I like to think that they chose to emigrate to Melbourne because it was as far away as possible from their embarrassingly named home town.
How about Kowsit Lats in Hancock Michigan?
Just commented above, but Rampant Horse Street in Norwich?
Just commented above, but Rampant Horse Street in Norwich?
@@ianrich4599. Rampant Horse Lane in Downham Market. Perhaps this is a Norfolk thing?
Interesting street names, you ask? Well in my home town of Bicester there is a street on the edge of the town centre - which can be best described as two cul-de-sacs linked by an alleyway - called Crumps Butts. (It passes round the back of my local pub, the Bell...)
...As a bit of aside there is also a street in my birth-town of Banbury called Parsons street, which may not be that interesting, but it connected to Banbury castle (No longer there), which was a besieged royalist stronghold during the civil war, and Oliver Cromwell stayed at an inn halfay along the street which still exists today (The Old Reindeer). Apparently back then it was a red-light area and called Gropec**t lane!
From New England, I loved this video. I've been through York a few times while on the train from Edinburgh to London, but never had time to explore the city. It looks very nice. Definitely on my bucket list for a future trip.
Go do it, York is a wonderful city. The Minster, Roman Wall and the Railway Museum (not to be missed.)
I second making a visit. I did 3 days there. I spent an entire day at the Railway Museum. The Minster has a couple of different tours available, including one where you can climb to the top of the tower and get a 10 or 20 mile view. There are also the ruins of the former Abbey.
Thanks for the encouragement.
Go for it. But make sure you don't try to go when the races are on. Not a hotel to be had for miles around. (We ended up going to Harrogate instead.)
@@Krzyszczynski which races are those? I was there only a short time, but never once heard anyone mention some sort of annual races that take place in the area.
Sorry to lower the tone, have a giggle at Slaparse lane, Broadclyst, Exeter EX5 3AD. (There used to be cow sheds down the lane.)
I think my favourite is Menlove Avenue in Liverpool because it sounds like the punchline to a joke. Someone once made a deliberate decision to call it "Avenue" rather than "Road" or "Lane", and I salute them.
There's always the classic sign tampering shenanigans on Canal Street in the Gay Village in Manchester, where people hide the letters to form "anal treet" lol.
Childhood home of John Lennon, of course
Indeed.
Avenues have trees. There are also rules for whether a road is a street or a road (although mine was once one and now is the other - without anything chaging - it also has trees, but isn't an avenue!). I can't remember the details, but it's on Wikipedia, so it must be true.
It's also the home of the bewildering Menlove Dental Practice.
There's a very short street, possibly shorter than Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate, down here in Southsea, at one end of which is the sea. It previously didn't have a name, but was given one to honour local lad Neil Gaiman: it's called The Ocean At The End Of The Lane.
There's a "Needless alley" in Brum which always makes me chuckle. Especially the thought of someone going to the trouble of making a sign for a needless alley
I lived in England from 1979 to 1981. One of the things we enjoyed were walking tours around London. There were many to choose from and one that stands out was a tour of the east end--learned all about Cockney rhyming slang and other things. The tour guide was explaining that many streets were named after what was sold there. Bread was sold in Bread Street. Milk was sold in Milk Street and so on. You should have seen the look on the tour guide's face when my mother pointed to the sign for Love Street.
That would be the cleaned up version. When Jago mentioned Grope Lane, historically there's a 4 letter word, starts with C, ends with T, one vowel , in-between Grope and Lane.
No, not cart or cult, although the latter is only 2 letters out.
@@paulqueripel3493 2 letters ? I demand a rec(o)unt.
I would recommend the “ Lesser Spotted Britain” range of stuff online. There’s plenty of stuff to like. The book Far from Dull is a great read and explains why some places have odd names.
Broad Pavements might not sound very interesting, but it's the narrowest driveable road in Chesterfield. It's also quite apart from all the other Pavements, giving the impression that it was named quite deliberately.
This isn't quite a name thing, but in Goring-by-Sea, Worthing, part of the very long Ilex Avenue runs down the middle of the very quiet dual carriageway, Ilex Way. (Goring has a lot of very quiet dual carriageways. It's all rather nice.) Ilex Way itself is an unmade track, but it's a very unusual one: it's far too straight to be a traditional right of way, and Ilex Way doesn't seem like a traditional Sussex name at all. It's a very Anglo-Saxon part of the world where traditional names generally have a very earthy feel, but Ilex Way is a very gentrified sort of name. Why then is it neither manicured like a park nor metalled for motor-cars? I don't know, but I do think it's better the way it is.
Maybe it's from Latin? In Latin, "ilex" is the name for the evergreen oak tree. Maybe there was one there once?
@@TrimeshSZ That must be it. Ilex Avenue is lined with magnificent trees -- or it was, last time I was there.
Not to mention Low Pavements Chesterfield off Knifesmithgate
@@gazbrucia1654 Eh, Low Pavements is just kind-of downhill, though I guess the name might have another meaning. Knifesmithgate seems like a cool name, but it's not really any stranger than Saltergate. Glumangate though... I think I should have suggested Glumangate. :)
Chesterfield has some strange names, when i drive from Alfreton to Chesterfield there is DEEPSICK LANE. And near the National grid substation is cock alley.
2:31 One and a half? Perhaps also a strong contender for the street with the largest proportion of non-integers among its street numbers?
I once dated someone whose father was brought up in 1.3/4 Intown Row. So far as I know, this was exactly like Flat C etc these days, but the numbering system used on Intown Row dated from the turn of the 19th/20th Centuries at the latest, likely mid-19th Century. I believe there was a 1.1/4 and a 1.1/2, but how many of the other numbers on the street were similarly fractionalised I don't know.
@@thisnicklldo was that in glasgow ?
@@highpath4776 No, in the Black Country.
@@thisnicklldo might be similar to some of the scottish tenaments buildings (I have only ever been to the black country museum where I think there were a form of terraced houses - round a courtyard ?
@@highpath4776 I understand such arrangements did exist in the area, though I've never seen it, but this particular case was just a row of terraced houses, now demolished. I believe that each of the 4 houses had separate entrances from the street, and had numbers on the doors to suit. How they got like that I never really found out. The chap in question left there when he was young-ish, so that would have been just pre-WW2, so he might not have remembered. It's possible that 1 and 1.1/2 were as originally built, then economic pressures caused subdivision of each half. It's also possible that the plot was undeveloped for a period after the street was built but still given its number, then the developer decided to put a terrace of 4 small houses on the site. I'm afraid I don't know whether next door had 2, 2.1/4, 2.1/2, 2.3/4 etc. Certainly the houses were tiny, with very narrow rooms and I think 1 room at the front, some sort of kitchen/scullery at the back, and I guess 2 rooms on the 1st floor - definitely no bathrooms, of course. It came up in discussion as an illustration of the relative poverty of his upbringing.
My favourite is Land of Green Ginger in Hull. But Memory Lane in Leicester is also good to take a trip down!
What about Every Street in Leicester - my Dad used to boast that he'd been down Every Street in his home town.
Nicely done as always!
I... seem to vaguely recall from my travels abroad (I am, quite sadly, now stuck in a small town in the American South, and it's pretty awful here) that there is either a street or place-name in London that is "St. Johns By The Loo". I distinctly remember my mother and I looking at the sign, looking at each other, giggling uproariously, and simultaneously spouting off with, "Only in London!".
Whato Jago,
An entertaining piece as always.
Did you know Nottingham is full of streets called gate such as Bridlesmith Gate (Nottingham was one of the five boroughs of Danelaw). The city also has a tramway so perhaps it’s time to visit Nottingham.
And don't forget that Nottingham's original name was Snottingham, I believe, surely that should be mentioned as well!!!
Today I learned that there's a Yerkes Road in King Of Prussia, PA, USA. My first thought was "I wonder if Jago knows that?" 😆
At Brighouse, in West Yorkshire, there are, or were, three adjacent streets -Brick Terrace, Tile Terrace and Brick and Tile Terrace.
There's a street in Workington called Pow Street and I've always hoped that you might get to it via Zap Avenue which is just round the corner from Splat Gardens.
I once heard of a street called Bell End. When I last saw it, it led to a place called Knob Hill. But it was in the middle of a construction site, which had levelled the hill, meaning it no longer existed. Such a shame. Would have made for a great video here.
“Bell End” in Rowley Regis.
In fact, there are several Bell Ends in the UK.
Some are running the country. lol
Quite a few of them went to my school.
This video was an absolute delight! You learn something new everyday.
If you ever find yourself in Tynemouth (and I can recommend that you should) then you could gaze upon Back Front Street
Not a street, but there's a place just outside Bolton in a place called Little Lever on the Manchester, Bolton and Bury Canal called Nob End. It's the site of a rather large flood where the canal retaining wall collapsed and it all washed down the hill into the river Irwell. The canal at that part is still empty to this day.
If we're going to place names, Pity Me in Co Durham has to be in with a shout.
I bet you could do a series on weird street names.
I’m not too proud to admit I squealed in delight when I saw this street in person.
Southwell in Nottinghamshire has a street called "Lowe's Wong". No idea where that one came from.
Catte Street in Oxford was sanitised to Catherine Street by the Victorians, but got its original name back in the 20th century. Apparently 'Cat' was mediaeval/early modern slang for a lady of purchasable virtue.
Petticoat Lane in London was renamed Middlesex Street for similar reasons
My old college is on Catte Street. How appropriate!
Helston in Cornwall has a street called Drippy Droppy - just that, no "Street" or "Lane" or "Road" on the end of it.
Hull has a street called "The Land of Green Ginger", so called I believe as it was where the spice merchants had their offices / shops / warehouses.
A dead end road off Berkeley Square in Bristol called “There and Back Again Lane”, must be a strong contender
Now you mention it, I remember the word 'gata' for 'street' from visits to Iceland. Many thanks for the upload.
My nomination for best street name is Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi Cul-De-Sac in Hammersmith
Here in Worcestershire we have got Minge Lane in Upton on Severn. Just down the road we've got Lickey End and also Bell End - it's like living on the set of a Carry on film!
I used to live on a Horsewater Wynd in Dundee. There is of course "The Street with No Name" in Levenshulme, Manchester; Ham Yard in Soho, London; Grisleymires Lane, Milnthorpe, Westmorland. My personal all time favourite address has to be Stank Farm, Stank Road, Stank, Barrow-in-Furness.
In Whitby there is a "Loggerheads Yard" and in Crewe is "Electricity street"
there is HA HA road in Woolwich..Drunken Drove in Great Massingham
and places called Pratts Bottom[London] Sexhow [Nth Yorkshire]and Shitterton in Scotland!
There's an Admirals Hard in Plymouth and a major bus station in Portsmouth is literally called the Hard.
In Bristol there is "There And Back Again Lane", which is also an incredibly short street. Just off Berkeley Square by the university.
Ha-ha Jago, in fact Ha-ha Road in Greenwich, I believe featured in one of The Tim Traveller’s videos. So what’s so ha-ha?
A 'ha ha' is a sunken ditch which serves as a boundary marker for property, rather than a high wall that could block the landowner's view. (Ok I Googled the last part)
Best wishes from Oxfordshire, where in Oxford City there is a “Magpie Lane.” Previous to that name, I believe it had another name. I’ll leave it there for obvious reasons. There is still Crotch Crescent and Titup Hall Drive to amuse those with a certain type of humour (not me though 😂)
There's also St-Louis-du-Ha! Ha!, Quebec (three hyphens, not four - marks will be lost on Trivia Night if you get this wrong), the only place in the world with two exclamation marks in its name.
The original name was Gropec**t lane, so called because it was the centre for prostitution in Oxford. Many towns and cities had a Grope or Gropec**t lane or street. Here in Worcester, the Technical College ( now Heart of Worcestershire College) was built on top of Grope Lane.
As far as whimsical street/thoroughfare names go, I quite like Christmas Steps in Bristol; Pedestrian Diversions here on youtube has a video on it where its history and etymology are covered
If I get stressed at work; I calm down by taking 'Tranquil Passage' SE3, in Blackheath, London, on route home. I do love your vids Sir!
When i worked in the cambridge telephone exchange with a bunch of dislocated londoners, one of them told me the tale of, I think, a group of streets in london, called "King, William, The, Fourth, Of, Orange". Each part had a street - so somewhere in london is supposedly a mythical "of street". I couldn't find it in my trust 80s A-Z. But I did find King, William and IIRC The streets. It sounds like the kind of thing you might find intriguing... Note: i may have the saying slightly wrong. It's King William the something of something. I think it was fourth of orange, though that doesn't make a huge amount of historical sense. Just to clarify - this is half remembered trivia from the early 90s, so I'm sorry for being vague.
There was a Prince William IV of Orange in the 1750’s or alternatively future William ll of Holland who fought at Waterloo.
Have checked online map. William IV Street just up from St Martin in the Fields church.
Off Villiers Street
maps.app.goo.gl/jaiiXsmjUCBVzS9u9
'York Place, formerly Of Alley' is probably what you are thinking of.
Not quite a street but a video of the Ye Olde Mitre pub near Chanery Lane and its weird Cambridgeshire postcode would be a good recommendation. Actually, you could do a whole video on the Chancery name and where those weird legal names come from.
There's a Blue Boar Alley In 1:32 Aldgate, London , which according to local rumour used to be known as Gropec*** Lane, apparently due to some activity that went on there.
How about Long Tongue Scrog lane in Kirkheaton Huddersfield
Once upon a time, when I first moved down to the West Country, I used to spend many hours discovering the delights of the area by means of old OS maps …. And I was always particularly fond of Scratchy Bottom in Dorset. I have since studied the newer (metric) series maps and can no longer find it. I do hope it has not been lost to time.
Great video. We need more Yorkshire based Jago Hazzard videos!!!
Whip-ma-whop-ma sounds a bit like "Ek weet nie wat nie" in Afrikaans - which basically means "I don't know what". Similar to "Not one thing or another". York is a fantastic place - being whisked around the city in a couple of hours as I was by my tour group barely scratched the surface. It seems like every other building there is a museum of some kind.
A video from the esteemed Mr. Hazzard with nary a mention of mainline or tube trains - now that's a rare event ! 😎
Not one thing or another road. Adds a bit of je ne sais quoi to an address. Or not.
There is a Knightrider Street in EC4 and Bell End in Rowley Regis. Theres a Fanny Hands Lane in Ludford in Lincolnshire and a Squeeze Guts Alley in Truro . What a colourful place we live in.
In Kilsyth there's Tak Ma Doon Road, which, appropriately, is a steep, narrow windy lane from the hills behind the town.
The South Yorkshire Police Operations Centre in Sheffield is on Letsby Avenue.
Another shorts series lined up well 💖 Bravo
Norwich has a Rampant Horse Street, which when I was at university in the nineties had a cafe called the Rumbling Tum.
Rampant Horse Street was named after a pub where bodysnatchers took corpses to be transported to London. The pub was named after a horse market.
Great look at a great name. My fav is 'There and back again lane" in Bristol and worldwide, "Frozen Dog Road" in Emmett Idaho. 🚘
Reepham in Lincolnshire has a road called Smooting Lane.
02:52 I came for the bon mots and pretty buildings and stayed for the... woah what's that aerial array at the back of shot behind the DPD vans..?!
I was brought up in York. As a child my Mother would take me on a weekly shop in York. Our route included Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate. We would walk along the alley from The Shambes behind St Crux Church. At the Shambles end there is a sign directing you towards Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate, so I always thought the alley was Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate. Anybody know what this alley is actually called ? Until The Stonebow was open in 1960s, Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma Gate was a major bus route. Buses had to turn left from Pavement then immediately right into St Saviourgate, in both directions. A real bottleneck.
Hull has “The Land of Green Ginger” which is named after a hub.
I found out about this from The Orb track “The Land of Green Ginger” which was the title of a children’s book named after it, which was read by Kenneth Williams on Jackanory in the sixties.
Oh, how I’d love to see those episodes again. It is supposed to be a sequel to Aladdin, seemingly they are two versions of it, the second purportedly devolving into something not that good.
But anything that talks about a “portable back garden” has to be good.
Living not that far from York I have visited this street on quite a number of occasions and was aware of the name Whip-ma Whop-ma Gate but I had never connected the two...
Not really silly, more quirky- "Land of Green Ginger" in Hull is my favourite street name.
Not forgetting the oxymoronic Land of Green Ginger street in Hull.
green skin and ginger hair
Green ginger is fresh ginger.
@@gavinreid2741 that’s less fun
I think I mentioned before that there is a road called Tom Tit Lane near Oak Corner between Danbury and Maldon, Essex.
In short, another great video thanks Jago you certainly whipped up a good one. Love York, especially this area, was there again only a couple of weeks ago.
Magpie Lane in Oxford was once the Red Light District. Had a much more descriptive name back then, when the name included what was once an anatomical definition; but now is used to describe a parking enforcement officer
I didn't know that "Nazi" was once an anatomical definition.
Oh excellent, another Jago video from my home town, nice thing to come home from work to!
We have Crockherbtown Lane, Womanby Street and Golate, here in central Cardiff, and The Philog in the Whitchurch area, if that’s of any interest…
A couple I've come across - Cherry Bounce near Gadebridge Park and Red Gauntlet near California Country Park
I used to work around the corner from There And Back Again Lane in Bristol - it's a dead end.
What a street! or What, a street?
There’s a street in London (St James Park tube station) called Petty France - I’d be interested to know how that got its name.
Nice shout-out to Grope Lane in Shrewsbury. I was thinking of that, having been there yesterday.
Given how the various "Grope you know what" lanes got their name, my theory is that equestrian services were available on whip-ma-whop-ma gate.
As an equestrian, all I can say is this is unlikely, given the amount of space necessary for handling horses. I think you'd struggle to fit many horses on Whip-Ma-Whop-Ma-Gate, and if there'd been, say, a blacksmith there, it would have most likely been named for that. Given the prior name, you're more likely looking at a case of the street name being bastardized over time. The "neither one thing nor the other" translation certainly fits to describe a street, that honestly likely never saw much use besides as a thoroughfare between other streets.
In my old hometown,there is a street/road,called Skunks Misery,and its one of our back to earthy names! And that post from Connecticut,I found that there's one there too! By the way,this tidbit is from Long Island[NY],and on the North Shore of Nassau County! Oh,yes,and we have some place names of Dutch origin,dating from the 1600's! Plus some Indian names,to fill in the gaps!! Thank you 😇 😊!!
The Hudson Valley and environs are absolutely littered with Dutch place names.
@@alexhajnal107 Including a lot with the prefix "kill", which is Dutch for a small stream. Hence Fresh Kills (streams with freshwater) on Staten Island, New York, which was once one of NYC's main landfills. So perhaps a lot of Mafia-generated "fresh kills" ended up in Fresh Kills.
@@andyjay729 Yea. There's also _dorp_ (village), _zee_ (sea/large lake), _meer_ (lake), _hook_ ( _hoek_ : spit/peninsula/corner), and _vlei_ or _vly_ (wetland). Coney Island comes from _konijn_ (rabbit). There's also Harlem, Flushing, Amsterdam, etc. (cities/towns), the Bronx, van Cortlandt, etc. (people). The list is endless.
There is Bell End and Mincing Ln, in Rowley Regis West Midlands. The first one there was a bell foundry, but I'm not sure about the second one. Also, there is a Hawes land
A hawe is a mountain pass; a very good example is Hawes in the Yorkshire Dales, which sits at the centre of just such a pass.
Thanks for this. I’ve not seen any other RUclips videos on this, so you may be streets ahead of others
That wee church, St. Crux, is well worth a visit. Charities make use of it regularly and do teas, cakes and sarnies. Sometimes there's bric a brac stalls outside. It's jolly nice inside too with plaques in Latin and English of a time where the choice of J's and 1's and s's and f's were arbitrary. Thare's a large colourful tomb by the wall eulogising the deceased in glowing 16th C script. The stained glass window is pretty amazing from the inside- just as glowing. Photography from the outside does not do it justice.
Opp St. Crux is The Golden Fleece, variously given as the most haunted anywhere. It certainly had Yvette Fielding bleeping like a trooper (I think The Other Side deserves better media, existential conundrums not withstanding) but it does a nice pint and I'm pretty open minded about the strange shadows I saw on the CCTV. I suppose for those beyond the veil old habits die hard too.
The last time I was in York, it was the day that two suspiciously unconnected events happened. One was the removal of viagra from prescription in England and the other was the introduction of per unit alcohol pricing in Scotland where the former is free and the latter had just got dearer.