[108] The plan of the garden seemed to show that it had been curtailed when the houses to the east, Nos. 15 to 18, Austin Friars, were erected. They were formerly called Winckworth Buildings, and on their water-pipes were t w, 1726. In No. 18, James Smith, one of the authors of ‘Rejected Addresses,’ lived for a time. These houses are all now swept away.
[109] ‘London, Ancient and Modern, from the Sanitary and Medical Point of View,’ by G. V. Poore, M.D., F.R.C.P. London, 1889.