Excavations in 2006-8 by MOLA on the site of St Giles Court, on the
north side of St Giles High Street, Camden, illustrate the development
of this London suburb from the medieval period to the early 20th
century. Located opposite the parish church of the former medieval leper
hospital of St Giles-in-the-Fields, the site was open ground and gardens
until the mid-16th century when residential houses were built along the
High Street. St Giles was at the heart of London suburban expansion by
the mid-17th century. At this time it was a relatively prosperous
district, with houses lining the main streets and businesses developing
behind, including the Eagle and Child and Hampshire Hog inns. The
numerous objects recovered indicate a varied standard of living among
the inhabitants. By the late 18th century the reputation of the St Giles
area and its housing had declined and the site lay within the southern
core of the area known as the "Rookery" - a notorious late 18th- and
19th-century slum. However, this study reveals that the area's image may
not be entirely matched by reality: it found evidence of contrasting
lifestyles, households and businesses in this period, including a
prosperous family brewery, before the area eventually lost its
residential character and became almost purely commercial.