Exeter Exchange: Difference between revisions

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  <td colspan="2" bgcolor="#f18c77" style="text-align:center;">The exterior of the Exeter 'Change before 1810, with the sign for Pidcock's</td>  
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  <th>Official Name</th>
  <th>Official Name</th>
  <td>The Royal Menagerie, Exeter Exchange</td>
  <td>The Royal Menagerie, Exeter Exchange</td>
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  <td>1s to one room, 1s 6d to two rooms, 2s to all three rooms</td>
  <td>1s to one room, 1s 6d to two rooms, 2s to all three rooms</td>
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Latest revision as of 12:54, 8 May 2018

Exeter 'Change
The exterior of the Exeter 'Change before 1810, with the sign for Pidcock's
Official Name The Royal Menagerie, Exeter Exchange
Type of Establishment Menagerie
Current Manager Stephani Polito
Location The Strand
Cost of Entry 1s to one room, 1s 6d to two rooms, 2s to all three rooms
The interior of the 'Change circa 1820

The Exeter Exchange (commonly known as the Exeter 'Change) was built in 1676, on the north side of The Strand in London, almost opposite the Savoy Hotel. From 1773, the upper rooms were let out to a series of impresarios who operated a menagerie, competition to the menagerie at the Tower of London. At various times, this included monkeys, lions and tigers and various other exotic species, confined (as was common at the time) iron cages in small rooms. It was not uncommon for horses passing in the road outside to be spooked by the roaring of the big cats.


The menagerie was initially established by Thomas Clark, but it was purchased in 1793 by Gilbert Pidcock and then it passed to the ownership of Stephani Polito in 1810. Pidcock and Polito were both owners of travelling circuses and used the premises as winter quarters for their animals.


According to Ackermann's Repository of July 1812, the animals on display at the time included a Bengal tiger, a hyena, a lion, a jaguar, a sloth, a camel, monkeys, a hippopotamus, a rhinoceros, an elephant, an ostrich "said to weigh upwards of 200lbs and to be 11 feet high”", a cassowary, a pelican, "emews", cranes, an eagle, cockatoos, elks, kangaroos and antelopes. One of the star attractions was Chunee, an Indian elephant which had arrived in England in 1809, had performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden and was often paraded in the streets outside the menagerie itself.

The 'Change in LL

References

Wikipedia: The Exeter Exchange
Regency History: The Royal Menagerie at Exeter Exchange

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