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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:St_James_Workhouse
rdf:type
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St James Workhouse
rdfs:comment
The St James Workhouse opened in 1725 on Poland Street in the Soho area of London, England, in what was then the parish of Westminster St James, and continued well into the nineteenth century. Higginbotham conjectured that the infirmary at St James Workhouse was the one referred to in the American song "St. James Infirmary Blues", on the basis that that song dates from 'at least the early 19th century'. Inhabitants included the painter Charlotte Mercier, who died there in 1762.
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51.51409912109375
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-0.1374000012874603
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n10:Microcosm_of_London_Plate_096_-_Workhouse,_St_James's_Parish_(tone).jpg
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dbc:Poor_law_infirmaries dbc:19th-century_disestablishments_in_England dbc:Workhouses_in_London dbc:1725_establishments_in_Great_Britain
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43997780
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1111800802
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dbo:abstract
The St James Workhouse opened in 1725 on Poland Street in the Soho area of London, England, in what was then the parish of Westminster St James, and continued well into the nineteenth century. Higginbotham conjectured that the infirmary at St James Workhouse was the one referred to in the American song "St. James Infirmary Blues", on the basis that that song dates from 'at least the early 19th century'. Inhabitants included the painter Charlotte Mercier, who died there in 1762. The site of the workhouse is now the Q Park parking garage occupying the space between Poland Street and Marshall Street.
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