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Great North Road (Great Britain) : ウィキペディア英語版
Great North Road (Great Britain)

The Great North Road was the main highway between London and Scotland. It became a coaching route used by mail coaches travelling between London, York and Edinburgh. The modern A1 mainly parallels the route of the Great North Road. Coaching inns, many of which survive, were staging posts providing accommodation, stabling for horses and replacement mounts.〔Norman W. Webster (1974)'' The Great North Road''〕 Nowadays virtually no surviving coaching inns can be seen while driving on the A1, because the modern route bypasses the towns in which the inns are found.
==Route==

The traditional starting point of the Great North Road was Smithfield Market in Clerkenwell, London. On an island location in the middle of the street, at the southern end, where St John's Lane branches to the west, stood Hicks Hall which was the first purpose-built sessions-house for the Middlesex justices of the peace. It was used as the initial datum point for mileages on the Great North Road, and continued in this role, even after the building was demolished soon after 1778.〔Norman Webster (1974) ''The Great North Road''. Bath, Adams and Dart: 15–16〕 The route followed St John Street to the junction of City Road and Pentonville Road (near Upper Street) in the north, close to the Angel tube station. The Red Bull Theatre was on the street between 1604 and 1666, when it was destroyed in the Great Fire of London. James Burnett, Lord Monboddo (1714–1799) lived at 13 St John Street. He held "learned suppers" at his house, with guests including James Boswell, Robert Burns and Samuel Johnson.
When the General Post Office at St Martin's-le-Grand was built in 1829, coaches started using an alternative route, now modern A1 road, beginning at the Post Office and following Aldersgate Street and Goswell Road before joining the old route at the Angel. The Angel was an important staging post.〔Norman W. Webster (1974)'' The Great North Road'': 22–23〕 The next important stages were Highgate, Barnet, Hatfield, Baldock, Biggleswade and Alconbury, all replete with traditional coaching inns.
At Alconbury, the Great North Road joined the Old North Road, an older route which followed the Roman Ermine Street. Here a milestone records mileages to London via both routes: 65 by the Old North Road and 68 by the Great North Road.〔Norman W. Webster (1974)'' The Great North Road'': 56-7〕 From Alconbury the Great North Road follows the line of Ermine Street north, through Stilton and Stamford as far as Colsterworth (at the A151 junction). Inns on this section include the George at Stamford and the Bell Inn at Stilton, the original sellers of Stilton cheese.
At Colsterworth the Great North Road diverges west of the Roman road and continues through Grantham, Newark, Retford and Bawtry to Doncaster. North of Doncaster the Great North Road again follows a short section of Ermine Street, the Roman Rigg or Roman Ridge. Further north the Great North Road crossed the Roman Dere Street near Boroughbridge from where it continued via Dishforth and Topcliffe to Northallerton and then through Darlington and Durham. A road forked to the left at the bridge in Boroughbridge to follow Dere Street, and Scotch Corner to Penrith and on to Glasgow. Part of this route was the original A1, with a local road from Scotch Corner via Barton to Darlington making the link back to the old Great North Road.
In the first era of stage coaches York was the terminus of the Great North Road. Along the route Doncaster–Selby–York was superseded by the route Doncaster–Ferrybridge–Wetherby–Boroughbridge–Northallerton–Darlington, the more direct way to Edinburgh, the final destination. The first recorded stage coach operating from London to York was in 1658 taking four days. Faster mail coaches began using the route in 1786, stimulating a quicker service from the other passenger coaches. In the 'Golden Age of Coaching', between 1815 and 35 coaches could travel from London to York in 20 hours and from London to Edinburgh in 45 and a half. In the mid-nineteenth century coach services could not compete with the new railways. The last coach from London to Newcastle left in 1842 and the last from Newcastle to Edinburgh in July 1847.〔Norman W. Webster (1974)'' The Great North Road: 6–9''〕

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