Newgate
See COVE Master Map entry: https://editions.covecollective.org/place/newgate
In London Labour and the London Poor edition:
Phase 1
See COVE Master Map entry: https://editions.covecollective.org/place/newgate
In London Labour and the London Poor edition:
Phase 1
Newcastle-under-Lyme is a market town in Staffordshire, England.
In London Labour and the London Poor edition:
Phase 1
Of the Experience of a Street Author, or Poet. (Volume 1): "'I was born at Newcastle-under-Lyne," the man said, "but was brought to London when, I believe, I was only three months old.'"
Newcastle upon Tyne (or Newcastle) is the largest city in Northeast England. It is located on the banks of the River Tyne. Newcastle became a print centre in the 18th century as well as a producer of flint glass. In the 19th century, its core industries included shipbuilding, heavy engineering, and pottery, and the industrialization resulted in the urbanisation of the city.
In London Labour and the London Poor:
Of the Cheap Johns, or Street Hansellers. (Volume 1)
New Row, formerly New Street, is a street in Covent Garden, City of Westminster (London, England).
In London Labour and the London Poor:
The Whistling Man. (Volume 3)
See COVE Master Map entry: https://editions.covecollective.org/place/new-york
In London Labour and the London Poor edition:
Phase 1
New South Wales is a state in Australia. Its capital is Sydney.
In London Labour and the London Poor:
Of Prostitution in London (Volume 4)
The New Road was a toll road which first opened in 1756 around the northern boundaries of London, England. The New Road was divided into several roads in the 19th century, becoming Marylebone Road, Euston Road, Pentonville Road, and later City Road and Moorgate.
In London Labour and the London Poor edition:
Phase 1
New Oxford Street is a street in the modern borough of Camden (London, England). It runs from High Holborn west to Tottenham Court Road where it then becomes Oxford Street.
In London Labour and the London Poor edition:
Phase 1
New Kent Road is a road in the modern borough of Southwark, created in 1751 when a local footpath was upgraded. It was once named Greenwich Road.
In London Labour and the London Poor:
The Old Woman “over the Water.” (Volume 2)
Character of Cabdrivers. (Volume 3)
The Cut (formerly New Cut) is a street in London, running from Waterloo Road in Lambeth and Blackfriars Road in Southwark. It was the site of Lower Marsh Market and the New Cut market. The Cut market closed in the 1950s when the street became a B300 thoroughfare.
In London Labour and the London Poor edition:
Phase 1