Today the street is principally known as a shopping destination, being anchored at its east and west ends respectively by The Oracle and Broad Street Mall enclosed shopping centres. However the street has also played an occasional role in English history, most especially during the Battle of Reading (1688), sometimes referred to as the Battle of Broad Street.
History
The town of Reading is believed to have been founded in the Saxon period, and originally centred on the site of the current St Mary's Church, to the south of the western end of Broad Street. After 1121, the foundation of Reading Abbey, to the north of the eastern end of Broad Street, provided a stimulus for the rapid expansion of the town. Broad Street, and the parallel Friar Street, were laid out by the Abbey at this time, to connect the newer Norman part of town to the older Saxon centre.[2][3]
The early street layout of Reading can be seen in John Speed's atlas, published in 1611 (named Brode Stret). Broad Street commenced at the junction with St Mary's Butts (then known as Old Street) and Oxford Road (Pangbourne Lane[4]), and ran eastwards. Only two side streets are shown, with Chain Street running south and Cross Street to the north. Between the Cross Street and Minster Street, what is now the eastern end of Broad Street was occupied by two narrow and roughly parallel streets, Fisher Row and Butcher Row, with a middle row of buildings between them.[5]
In 1862, the row of shops that had occupied the centre of what is now the eastern end of Broad Street was demolished. The narrow streets of Fisher Row and Butcher Row were joined and became part of Broad Street. In 1879, the first line of the Reading Tramway Company'shorse-drawn tramway was opened along Broad Street.[9][10]
In 1903, Reading Corporation Tramways' electric trams replaced the horse-drawn tramcars along Broad Street. The following year, the last major change to the street plan of Broad Street occurred when Queen Victoria Street was opened, cutting through various old properties between Broad Street and Friar Street. Queen Victoria Street at last provided a direct link from Broad Street to Reading station, opened in 1840.[8][11][12]
The last tram services in Reading continued to operate along Broad Street until 1939, when they were replaced by trolleybuses. These in turn were retired in 1968, when diesel buses took over. In 1970, Broad Street was closed to all traffic except buses and for access, with through traffic diverted onto a one-way system and the first phase of the town's Inner Distribution Road.[13][14]
Broad Street was further pedestrianised in 1995, and the bus services that previously used it were diverted onto the loop route around the town's central area, using St Mary's Butts, Friar Street, Market Place and Minster Street. The street was subsequently remodelled with a red-brick surface extending across the whole width of the street, and with the inclusion of street trees, sculpture and licensed street traders.[15][16]
The Oracle shopping centre has a direct entrance from Broad Street, and houses many other major stores, including the department stores of Debenhams and House of Fraser, as well as a large selection of restaurants and bars.[18]
Union Street known locally as Smelly Alley due to its open fronted fishmonger's and greengrocer's shops, is a narrow street which runs between Broad Street and the parallel Friar Street. Although the number of food shops has declined recently, it is still home to a number of local independent stores.[19][20][21]
References
^Serck, Linda (17 February 2009). "Reading: Then and Now". BBC Berkshire. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
^Norton, Andrew; Poore, Daniel (2007). Excavations in Broad Street, Reading. Oxford Archaeology. ISBN978-0-904220-42-1.
^Phillips, Daphne (1980). The Story of Reading. Countryside Books. p. 54. ISBN0-905392-07-8.
^Phillips, Daphne (1980). The Story of Reading. Countryside Books. p. 43. ISBN0-905392-07-8.
^ abNash Ford, David (8 December 2007). "The Battle of Broad Street". Royal Berkshire History. Archived from the original on 26 September 2008. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
^Phillips, Daphne (1980). The Story of Reading. Countryside Books. p. 47. ISBN0-905392-07-8.
^ abPhillips, Daphne (1980). The Story of Reading. Countryside Books. p. 142. ISBN0-905392-07-8.
^Phillips, Daphne (1980). The Story of Reading. Countryside Books. p. 130. ISBN0-905392-07-8.