Everything about Brick Lane totally explained
Brick Lane is a long street in the
London Borough of Tower Hamlets, in the
East End of London. The street runs from
Bethnal Green in the north, passes through
Spitalfields and is linked to
Whitechapel High Street to the south by the short stretch of Osborn Street. Today, it's the heart of the city's
Sylheti Bangladeshi
community, and is sometimes known as
Banglatown.
History
Winding through fields, the street was formerly
Whitechapel Lane, but derives its current name from former brick and tile manufacture, using the local brick earth deposits, that began in the 15th century. By the 17th century, the street was being built up from the south. Successive waves of immigration began with
Huguenot refugees spreading from Spitalfields, where the master weavers were based, in the 17th century. They were followed by
Irish weavers,
Ashkenazi Jews and, in the last century,
Bangladeshis. The area became a centre for weaving, tailoring and the clothing industry, due to the abundance of semi- and unskilled immigrant labour.
In 1742,
La Neuve Eglise a Huguenot chapel was built on the corner of Brick Lane and Fournier Street. By 1809, it had become
The Jews’ Chapel, for promoting Christianity to the expanding Jewish population, and became a Methodist Chapel in 1819 (
John Wesley having preached his first covenant sermon at the nearby
Black Eagle Street Chapel). In 1898, the building was consecrated as the
Machzikei HaDath, or
Spitalfields Great Synagogue. In 1976, it became the
London Jamme Masjid mosque to serve the expanding Bangladeshi community. Brewing came to Brick Lane before 1680, with water drawn from deep wells. One brewer was Joseph Truman, who is first recorded in 1683, but his family, particularly
Benjamin Truman, went on to establish the sizeable
Black Eagle Brewery on Brick Lane.
The
Brick Lane Market, developed in the 17th century for fruit and vegetables, sold outside the city. The Sunday market, like the ones on
Petticoat Lane and nearby
Columbia Road, dates from a dispensation given to the Jewish community.
Regeneration
In the 20th century the Brick Lane area was important in the second wave of development of
Anglo-Indian cuisine, as families from countries such as
Bangladesh (mainly the
Greater Sylhet region) migrated to London to look for work. The
curry houses of Brick Lane are known for their cheap and cheerful food, (often the curry house itself won't sell
alcohol as most are run by
Muslims). More recently the area has also broadened to being a vibrant art and fashion student area, with considerable exhibition space. Each year most of the fine art and fashion courses exhibit their work near Brick Lane.
Bengalis in the
United Kingdom settled in big cities with industrial employment. In London Bengali's settled in the East End. For centuries the East End has been the first port of call for many immigrants working in the docks and shipping from east Bengal. Their regular stopover paved the way for food/curry outlets to be opened up catering for an all male workforce as family migration and settlement took place some decades later. Humble beginnings such as this gave birth to the famous curry capital of the UK, Brick Lane. Curry is eaten in almost all part of the Indian Sub-Continent and outside, namely India Bangladesh and Pakistan, it has its varying degrees of style, taste and aroma, depending on local ingredients used. Bengalis of Sylheti origin makeup only 10% of all South Asians in Britain however around 90% of all Indian restaurants in the UK are Sylheti/Bengali owned displaying the preference British and western customers have for food of that region.
It has also been, since the late 1990s, the site of several of the city's best known
night clubs, notably
93 Feet East and
The Vibe Bar, both built on the site of The
Old Truman Brewery, once the industrial centre of the area, now an office and entertainment complex.
Nearby buildings of interest include
Christ Church, Spitalfields, The Jamme Masjid or
Great London Mosque on the corner of
Fournier Street, and the head office of
Habitat on Princelet Street.
Brick Lane is world famous for its graffiti which features artists such as
Banksy,
D*Face and
Ben Eine
The lane has been used in many music videos such as "
Glory Days" by
Just Jack and "
All These Things That I've Done" by
The Killers.
The nearest tube station is currently
Aldgate East. A campaign has been launched to change the name of the station to "Brick Lane" by 2012, but this has no official support.
Contemporary culture wars
Brick Lane is the location for
Monica Ali's book of the same name, published in 2003, now also a film.
The novel provoked a controversy with some of the local Bangladeshi community because of a perceived negative portrayal of them. Parts of the community were particularly opposed to plans by Ruby Films to film parts of the novel in the Brick Lane area, and formed the "Campaign Against Monica Ali's Film Brick Lane." Consequently the producers of the film used different locations in the filming. The campaign was allegedly supported by
Germaine Greer, who wrote that: "As British people know little and care less about the Bangladeshi people in their midst, their first appearance as characters in an English novel had the force of a defining caricature ... [S]ome of the Sylhetis of Brick Lane didn't recognise themselves.
Bengali Muslims smart under an Islamic prejudice that they're irreligious and disorderly, the impure among the pure, and here was a proto-Bengali writer with a Muslim name, portraying them as all of that and more." Greer's involvement has angered some within the British literary community.
Salman Rushdie, who set parts of his novel
The Satanic Verses on Brick Lane, has called it "philistine, sanctimonious, and disgraceful, but ... not unexpected".
Other notable books on the area are
Salaam Brick Lane by
Tarquin Hall and
On Brick Lane (2007) by
Rachel Lichtenstein.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Brick Lane'.
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