Queen's Head Tavern / Apollo Tavern

The Queen's Head Tavern was located on Fleet Street to the east of the Temple Bar in London. It was already established in 1682 when it is mentioned in the diary of Narcissus Luttrell: "The 2nd, in the morning early, a fire broke out in the back part of the Queen's Head Tavern, by Temple Bar".[1]

Perhaps its most notable clientele were the members of a masonic music club that met there between 1725 and 1727, known as Philo-musicae et -architecturae societas Apollini; their musical director was the famous Italian composer and violinist Francesco Geminiani.[2]

Apollo Court, Fleet Street, as shown on John Rocque's Map of London, 1746

The club's minute-book reveals that during their residency at the tavern the landlord Thomas Oliverson (d.1731) agreed to change the name of the tavern to Apollo, and a new tavern sign was painted by Jaques (James) Parmentier, a member of the club.[3] It seems likely that the thoroughfare adjacent to the tavern, identified as Apollo Court on John Rocque's Map of London, 1746, was so named because of the tavern, however the name of the tavern seems to have disappeared from the record by the end of the eighteenth century.[4]

Old Bank of England, on Fleet Street in 2009

The site of the tavern and the southern end of Apollo Court was cleared in the nineteenth century to make way for a branch of the Bank of England to serve the newly built Law Courts. In a nice twist of fate, that bank building is now a tavern, called 'The Old Bank of England'.

References

  1. E.B. Chancellor The Annals of Fleet Street (London: Chapman and Hall Ltd, 1912), p. 308
  2. Andrew Pink, 'A music club for freemasons: Philo-musicae et -architecturae societas Apollini, London, 1725-1727', Early Music, 38 (4), pp. 523-36, accessed 16 May 2016.
  3. Music club for freemasons op. cit
  4. Andrew Pink. 'Geminiani and Freemasonry' in Christopher Hogwood (Ed) Geminiani Studies. Series: Ad Parnassum Studies, vol. 6 (Ut Orpheus: Bologna, 2013), pp. 369-398.

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