Everything about Agar Town totally explained
Agar Town (or
Agar-Town or
Agar-town) was a short-lived area of
St Pancras,
London. It was named after William Agar, a wealthy lawyer who lived at Elm Lodge, a villa in large grounds near to the
Regent's Canal roughly where Barker Drive is now. Agar Town consisted of low-quality housing for poor people, built of the lowest quality materials on 21 year
leases, and was generally considered a
slum. The neighborhood was started in 1841 with Agar's widow leasing out small plots, and was demolished by the
Midland Railway to make way for
St Pancras railway station from 1866.
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