
Piccadilly street sign.
'Piccadilly' is a major
London street, running from
Hyde Park Corner in the west to
Piccadilly Circus in the east. It is completely within the
City of Westminster. The street is part of the
A4 road, London's main western artery.
St. James's lies to the south of the eastern section of the street, while the western section is built up only on the northern side and overlooks
Green Park. The area to the north is
Mayfair.
It is the location of
Fortnum & Mason, the
Royal Academy,
The Ritz Hotel and
Hatchards book shop.
Simpsons, once amongst the United Kingdom's leading clothing stores, opened on Piccadilly in the
1930s. The store closed in
1999 and the site is now the flagship shop of the
booksellers Waterstone's.
History
Until the 17th century the area was known as Portugal, after Portugal Street. The name of Piccadilly arises from a tailor named Robert Baker, who owned a shop on
the Strand, in the late
16th century and early
17th century. He amassed a large fortune by making and selling
piccadills (also called
picadils -- stiff collars with scalloped edges and a broad lace or perforated border), that were then in fashion. With his great fortune he purchased a large tract of what was then open country to the west of London, and in about
1612 he built a large house there. The mansion soon became known as Piccadilly Hall.
There is a myth that in the 17th century, call girls were called 'Dilly's. Picadilly is rumoured to be named after 'picking a dilly' in the area, however the tailor story has stuck in historic terms.
After the Restoration of the English monarchy in 1660, Piccadilly and the area to the north (Mayfair) began to be systematically developed as a fashionable residential locality. Some of the grandest mansions in London were built on the northern side of Piccadilly.
Clarendon House (now the location of
Albemarle Street), Berkeley House (later
Devonshire House), and Sir John Denham's house (later
Burlington House) were constructed in the 17th century. Later mansions included Melbourne House (now
The Albany),
Apsley House,
Bath House and
Cambridge House. Several members of the
Rothschild family had mansions at the western end of the street, and that part of it was colloquially referred to as Rothschild Row. By the 1920s most of these buildings had been demolished or were in institutional use.

The Ritz
21st century Piccadilly has a hybrid range of uses. Despite the presence of two or three famous shops, it is not really one of London's principal shopping streets. The
Ritz Hotel is in the street, along with some other luxury hotels. There are also some offices and some very expensive flats. However, Piccadilly's appeal is compromised by being one of the widest and straightest streets in central London, and hence having some of the most overbearing traffic.
There was a
British film made in
1929 called ''"
Piccadilly"''.
Transport
The
Piccadilly Line of the
London Underground takes its name from Piccadilly and part of the line travels under Piccadilly.
Green Park,
Hyde Park Corner and
Piccadilly Circus tube stations all have entrances either on or near to Piccadilly.
See also
Selected adjoining streets include:
★
Albemarle Street
★
Dover Street
★
Hyde Park Corner
★
Old Bond Street
★
Piccadilly Circus
★
Regent Street
★
St James's Street
References
★ ''Robert Baker of Piccadilly Hall and His Heirs'' by F.H.W. Sheppard (ISBN 0-902087-18-5)
External links
★
The Early History of Piccadilly — from the ''
Survey of London''
★
An article from the International Herald Tribune about the closing of Simpsons, its history and place on Piccadilly