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          <abstract><p><ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> was an important location in early modern <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref>. Providing a point of access to the <ref target="mol:THAM2">Thames</ref> from <ref target="mol:WHIT5">Whitehall</ref>, the stairs were used by both the public and members of the royal family. Although the stairs are rarely alluded to in early modern literature, they appear in a number of texts about daily life in <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref> during the time period.</p></abstract>
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   <div xml:id="WHIT6_introduction"><head>Introduction</head>
       
      
       <p><ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> was a historically significant site, providing access to the <ref target="mol:THAM2">Thames</ref> from <ref target="mol:WHIT5">Whitehall Palace</ref>. While the stairs are not labelled on the Agas map, they were a part of everyday life in <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref>. Few mentions of the <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> can be found in early modern literature; however, they are memorialized in a number of accounts of life in <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref>, from legal records to personal diaries.</p>  
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            <head>Royalty</head>
            <p>The <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> were not the only stairs leading to the <ref target="mol:THAM2">Thames</ref> near <ref target="mol:WHIT5">Whitehall Palace</ref>. According to Cox and Norman, <quote>from the beginning there were two sets of river stairs at <ref target="mol:WHIT5">Whitehall</ref>, the public <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref>, and the <ref target="mol:PRIV1">Privy Stairs</ref></quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:SURV13">Cox and Norman</ref>). As to why there were two sets of stairs, there may have been a public thoroughfare next to <ref target="mol:WHIT5">York Place</ref>, with a public landing on the <ref target="mol:THAM2">Thames</ref>. If this public thoroughfare existed, then <quote>public rights had to be considered even by <name ref="mol:HENR1">Henry VIII</name></quote> when he acquired <ref target="mol:WHIT5">York Place</ref> and transformed it and the surrounding area into the <ref target="mol:WHIT5">Palace of Whitehall</ref> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:SURV13">Cox and Norman</ref>). Accordingly, the <ref target="mol:PRIV1">Privy Stairs</ref> were for the private use of the royals and favoured nobles dwelling at <ref target="mol:WHIT5">Whitehall</ref>, while <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> were intended for public use.</p> 
           <p>Nevertheless, royalty did on occasion use the public <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref>. <name ref="mol:ELIZ1">Queen Elizabeth</name> was known to use the stairs during royal processions on the river.<note type="editorial" resp="mol:LAND2">For more information about royal processions, see MoEML’s critical introduction to <ref target="mol:QMPS1"><title level="m">The Queen’s Majesty’s Passage</title></ref>.</note> Other royals used <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> for matters of state. The record keeper for the corporation of Rye discusses plans for the coronation of <name ref="mol:JAME1">King James I</name> and <name ref="mol:ANNE2">Queen Anne</name>, noting that <quote>The King and Queen would be crowned on the <date when-custom="1603-07-25" datingMethod="mol:julianSic" calendar="mol:julianSic">25th of this month [July]</date>, and that two canopies were in making, yet the coronation would be private and their Majesties would take barge at <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall staires</ref> <gap reason="editorial" resp="mol:SMIT18"/> and thence be landed at the Parliament house stairs, where the canopies should be ready to receive them</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:RYEH1"><title level="a">The Corporation of Rye</title></ref>). <name ref="mol:HEYL1">Peter Heylyn</name> mentions that the stairs were also used to receive foreign ambassadors, <quote>who if they came to <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref> by Water, were met at Gravesent by the Lord Mayor, the Aldermen, and Companies in their severall Barges, and in that solemn sort conducted unto <ref target="mol:WHIT6">White Hall stairs</ref></quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:HEYL3">Heylyn 109</ref>).</p>
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            <div xml:id="WHIT6_literary">
                <head>Literary References</head>
             
                <p>Brief references to <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> occur often in early modern texts. <name ref="mol:TRAP2">Anna Trapnel</name>, a prophetess in <ref target="mol:ENGL2">England</ref> mentions the <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> in <title level="m">Anna Trapnel’s Report and Plea</title>. <name ref="mol:TRAP2">Trapnel</name> recounts her travels to Cornwall, where she was arrested and taken before the magistrates for disturbing the peace. When she began this ill-fated journey, she and her traveling companions <quote>went by water from <ref target="mol:SOUT2">Southwark</ref> to <ref target="mol:WHIT6">White-Hall-stairs</ref>, where [she] landed, and went to the Inne where [they] took Coach; and many friends came to bid [them] farewell</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:TRAP3">Trapnel 7</ref>). <name ref="mol:TRAP2">Trapnel</name> escaped conviction, but she did not indicate whether or not she returned by the same stairs. In <title level="a">Timothy Touchstone’s Reply to Sir Anonymous,</title> <name ref="mol:TOUC2">Timothy Touchstone</name>, a pen name, reports that a man <quote>at Two of the Clock in the Afternoon that day took Water from <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> with him</quote> upon the request of a brewer (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:TOUC1">Touchstone 2</ref>). This reference suggests that <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> was a popular place from which to draw water, particularly for breweries. In the penny pamphlet <title level="a">The Character of Those Two Protestants in Masquerade: Heraclitus and the Observator</title>, an anonymous writer ridicules the genre of the penny pamphlet, writing, <quote>Take but a Pair of Oars from <ref target="mol:BLAC1">Black-friars</ref> to <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref>, and the Academy will furnish you with as much Matter as will complete a dozen of these Pamphlets, with a great deal of Applause after the Publication</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:HERA1"><title level="a">Heraclitus and the Observator</title></ref>). The author mocks the simple ideas and the silly gossip printed in penny pamphlets, and the use of <ref target="mol:BLAC1">Blackfriars</ref> to <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> may signify that this was a common path on the river, upon which one would encounter many common people.<note type="editorial" resp="mol:TAKE1">For more information on gossip and gossips in early modern <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref>, see <ref type="mol:bibl" target="mol:GOSS1"><title level="a">Gossip and Gossips</title></ref>.</note></p>
            </div>
       
       
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          <head>The Fire and Beyond</head>
           <p><name ref="mol:PEPY1">Samuel Pepys</name> regularly used <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> to access the <ref target="mol:THAM2">Thames</ref>, often flagging <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> as a meeting place or point of departure. <name ref="mol:PEPY1">Pepys</name> writes that he met with <name ref="mol:MOUN9">Lord Montagu</name> and his retinue on <date when-custom="1661-01-02" datingMethod="mol:julianSic" calendar="mol:julianSic">2 January 1661</date> to conduct business at <quote><ref target="mol:WHIT6">White Hall stairs</ref></quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:PEPY4">Pepys</ref>). On <date when-custom="1663-05-04" datingMethod="mol:julianSic" calendar="mol:julianSic">4 May 1663</date>, <name ref="mol:PEPY1">Pepys</name> met his wife who <quote>called [him] at <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> (where [he] went before by land to know whether there was any play at Court to-night)</quote> before he joined her for the evening (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:PEPY4">Pepys</ref>).<note type="editorial" resp="mol:TAKE1">To see a full list of tagged references to <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> in <name ref="mol:PEPY1">Pepys</name>’ diary, see <title level="m"><ref target="mol:PEPY4" type="bibl">The Diary of Samuel Pepys</ref></title>’s encyclopedia article on <ref target="https://www.pepysdiary.com/encyclopedia/1489/">Whitehall Stairs</ref>.</note></p>
                     <p>As <name ref="mol:PEPY1">Pepys</name>’ diary indicates, <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> survived the <ref target="mol:FIRE1">Great Fire of London</ref> in <date when-custom="1666" datingMethod="mol:julianSic" calendar="mol:julianSic">1666</date>. <name ref="mol:PEPY1">Pepys</name> records a meeting with <name ref="mol:BATT5">Sir W. Batten</name> on <date when-custom="1667-05-22" datingMethod="mol:julianSic" calendar="mol:julianSic">22 May 1667</date>, six months after the fire, writing that they <quote>saw at <ref target="mol:WHIT6">White Hall stairs</ref> a fisher-boat, with a sturgeon that he had newly catched in the River</quote> (<ref type="bibl" target="mol:PEPY4">Pepys</ref>). <ref target="mol:WHIT6">Whitehall Stairs</ref> remained an important riverside feature in <ref target="mol:LOND5">London</ref> until the <date notBefore="1865" notAfter="1870">late 1860s</date>, when it was demolished to make way for the Victorian Embankment.</p>
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               <graphic url="graphics/website_images/hollar_view_of_lambeth_from_whitehall_stairs.jpg"/>
               <figDesc><name ref="mol:HOLL3">Wenceslaus Hollar</name>, <title level="m">View of Lambeth from Whitehall Stairs</title>. Image courtesy of <ref target="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wenceslas_Hollar_-_View_of_Lambeth_from_Whitehall_Stairs.jpg">Wikimedia Commons</ref>.</figDesc>
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