As in the case of the former Plender Street Market, Inverness Street Market represents a remnant of Camden Town Market which moved off Camden High Street after the late nineteenth-century electrification of horse-drawn tram.
Camden Town Market is described by Henry Mayhew in 1851 as consisting of 50 stalls.[2] Unregulated street markets allowed London to grow explosively in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The traders could move easily to the new population centres and enabled people to buy provisions without having to travel to the central London wholesale markets. In the early morning traders would load their barrows at the wholesale markets, clean and sort the goods, and then sell them in the new suburban streets. In many cases, the sites of these markets became London's modern high streets.
Management by the police (1867–1927)
In 1867, section six of the Metropolitan Streets Act effectively prohibited street trading. Following public meetings and press criticism, the act was amended within weeks. Section one of the Metropolitan Streets Act Amendment Act 1867 exempted traders but they were now subject to regulation by the police.[3]
The market was still on the High Street in 1878:
Saturday evenings the upper part of the street, thronged as it is with stalls of itinerant vendors of the necessaries of daily life, and with the dwellers in the surrounding districts, presents to an ordinary spectator all the attributes of a market place.[4]
Benedetta's The Street Markets of London makes only a passing reference to Inverness Street Market indicating that it was trading on weekdays only with mostly fruit and vegetables to purchase.[6]
Latterly a successful boxing trainer, George Francis worked on Inverness Street Market in the 1940s.[7]
In the mid-1980s the market was thriving, with about fifty stalls predominantly selling fruit, vegetables, cheese, meat, fish, and household goods.[8][9]
By the mid-1990s the market had declined somewhat to thirty stalls. While the range of products had remained similar to that of ten years before, the stalls closest to Camden High Street had changed their lines to souvenirs.[10]
Until 2009 there were bus stops on Camden High Street a short walk from Inverness Street and its market. In 2009 these stops were removed,[11] leaving a walk of a few hundred metres from the now nearest stops. After over a hundred years and following complaints for residents of the streets and local shop traders the council also insisted that the barrows be removed from the street when the market was not trading. Due to the lack of storage options, the barrows had to be destroyed and many of the remaining fruit and veg traders left.[12]
Until the 2010s the market predominantly sold produce, including fruit and vegetables. However, as the traditional shops turned into bars and eateries to cater to Camden's booming tourist and night-time economies the market evolved towards clothing, souvenirs, and street-food.[13]
After 2010 the market mostly sold clothing, souvenirs, and street food, with the last fruit and vegetable stand leaving some years after the nearby bus stop was closed.
In popular culture
Inverness Street Market was used as a filming location in the British drama television serial The Interceptor in 2015.[14]
^
Camden History Society (2020). Camden Street Names and their origins(PDF) (Report). London: Camden History Society. p. 56. Archived(PDF) from the original on 25 April 2023. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
^Walford, Edward (1878). Old and New London. Vol. V. London: Cassell, Petter & Galpin. pp. 309–324. Archived from the original on 5 June 2023. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
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Carrier, Dan (24 April 2020). "George Francis: a glove story". Camden New Journal. London. Archived from the original on 5 November 2021. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
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Bergström, Theo & Forshaw, Alec (1983). Markets of London (1st ed.). London: Butler & Tanner. p. 66. ISBN0-14-006653-5.
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Perlmutter, Kevin (1983). London Street Markets (1st ed.). Worcester: Billing & Sons. pp. 83–84. ISBN0-7045-0462-6.
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Harriss, Phil (1996). London Markets (1st ed.). London: Cadogan Books. pp. 100–101. ISBN1-86011-040-1.