,) was by the Temple;

Squire's

, by Gray's Inn;

Serle's

, by Lincoln's Inn.

Squire's

, a roomy, red-brick house, adjoined the gate of Gray's Inn, in Fulwood's Rents, Holborn, then leading to Gray's Inn Walks, which lay open to the country. Squire, the establisher of this coffee-house, died in 1717.

Serle's

was near Will's, which stood at the corner of Serle Street and Portugal Street, Lincoln's Inn.

[return to footnote mark]