221B Baker Street
221B Baker Street was the London residence of the famous literary detective Sherlock Holmes, created by author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The number followed by a letter is a separate number in law and indicated an apartment on the 1st floor (US - 2nd floor) of a residential lodging house that was likely to have formed part of a Georgian terrace.
The site of the house — had it ever existed (see below) — has been much disputed by scholars, although the address did not exist at the time when the stories were first published in 1887.
We met next day as he had arranged, and inspected the rooms at No. 221B, Baker Street, of which he had spoken at our meeting. They consisted of a couple of comfortable bed-rooms and a single large airy sitting-room, cheerfully furnished, and illuminated by two broad windows.
(Arthur Conan Doyle, A Study in Scarlet, 1887)
221B Baker Street
The street number 221B was assigned to the Sherlock Holmes Museum on 27 March 1990, when the Leader of Westminster City Council, Lady Shirley Porter, unveiled a blue plaque signifying the address of "221b Baker Street". She was invited to renumber the museum's building to coincide with its official opening, and because the number 221b had not been included in the original planning consent for the museum granted in October 1989. The number had also never been assigned to any premises in Baker Street prior to the museum's opening.

A long-running dispute then arose between the Sherlock Holmes Museum, the Abbey National (who had previously answered the mail addressed to Sherlock Holmes) and the Council. In 2005 the Abbey National vacated their headquarters in Baker Street, which then left the museum to battle with Westminster City councillors to obtain the kudos of the street numbering official's 'rubber-stamp' and to try to end the ongoing dispute over the number which had created much negative publicity.
In the period in which the Sherlock Holmes stories were set, street numbers in Baker Street only went up to 100, which was presumably why Conan Doyle chose a higher number.
The section north of Marylebone Road, near Regent's Park, now including 221 Baker Street, was known in Conan Doyle's lifetime as Upper Baker Street, and in the first manuscript, Conan Doyle put Holmes's house in "Upper Baker Street", indicating that if he had a house in mind it would have been there. However a British crime novelist named Nigel Moreland claimed that, late in Conan Doyle's life, he identified the intersection of Baker Street and George Street, about 500 metres south of Marylebone Road, as the location of 221b.
The plot further thickens with the latest assertion that Sherlock Holmes never lived in Baker Street, but lived at 42 Gloucester Place, a street running parallel to Baker Street.
Problems have arisen over the address because when street numbers were re-allocated in the 1930s, the block of odd numbers from 215 to 229 was assigned to an Art Deco building known as Abbey House, constructed in 1932 for the Abbey Road Building Society (subsequently called Abbey National and now simply Abbey), which the company occupied until 2002.
Almost immediately, the building society started receiving correspondence from Sherlock Holmes fans all over the world, in such volumes that it appointed a permanent "secretary to Sherlock Holmes" to deal with it. A bronze plaque on the front of Abbey House carried a picture of Holmes and a quotation, but was removed from the building several years ago and its whereabouts is presently unknown. In 1999, Abbey National sponsored the creation of a bronze statue of Sherlock Holmes that now stands at the entrance to Baker Street tube station.
Holmes scholars have had a number of theories as to the "real" address, but with much of Baker Street devastated during The Blitz, little trace is left of the original buildings except those which are located in the section previously called Upper Baker Street and which can been seen today forming a part of a Georgian terrace of houses originally built in 1815.
The Sherlock Holmes Museum

The Sherlock Holmes Museum is housed in an 1815 house very similar to the 221B described in the stories and is located between 237 and 241 Baker Street. Opened in 1990, it displays exhibits in period rooms, wax figures and Holmes memorabilia, with the famous study overlooking Baker Street the highlight of the museum.
According to the published stories, "221b Baker Street" was a suite of rooms on the first floor of a lodging house above a flight of 17 steps.[1] The main study overlooked Baker Street, and Holmes's bedroom was adjacent to this room at the rear of the house, with Dr Watson's bedroom being on the 2nd floor, overlooking a rear yard that had a plane tree in it.[2][3]
Since the Museum opened, it has had difficulty in obtaining official approval of its use of the street number '221b', despite its assertion that it is the real '221b Baker Street' as described in the stories. The main objection has nothing to do with the Holmes legend: it is the prosaic fact that the number is out of sequence with other numbers in the street: an issue for local bureaucrats who have striven for years to keep street numbers in sequence.
After the closure of Abbey House in 2005, the Post Office recognised the museum's exclusive right to receive mail addressed to Sherlock Holmes. The original decision to number the building as 221b in 1990 has stood the test of time: the famous 221b plaque is the most popular blue plaque in London.
The Sherlock Holmes Museum is listed by the government as Grade 2, of "special architectural and historical interest". Only castles and cathedrals such as Westminster Abbey rank higher.Vorlage:Citation needed
The Sherlock Holmes pub

Another version of Sherlock Holmes' apartment is at the Sherlock Holmes pub in Northumberland Street near Charing Cross railway station. This was originally a small hotel, the Northumberland Arms, but was refurbished and reopened under its present name in December 1957. Its owners, Whitbread & Co, were fortunate to own the entire Sherlock Holmes exhibit put together by Marylebone Borough Library and the Abbey National for the 1951 Festival of Britain. The pub was restored to a late Victorian form and the exhibit, a detailed replica of Holmes' fictional apartment, was installed on the upstairs floor.
Satire and homage
The fictional address has been satirized in the following pastiches of Sherlock Holmes:
- Basil of Baker Street resides in 221½ Baker Street, a mouse-hole beneath 221B Baker Street.
- In Solar Pons, Pons and Dr. Lyndon Parker both reside in 7B Praed Street, which is a street near Paddington Station, about 1 km west of Baker Street.Vorlage:Citation needed
- In the Jake 2.0 episode "The Good, the Bad, and the Geeky," Jake's secondary safe house in Berlin is "221B Bakerstrasse."
- Dr. Gregory House, the protagonist of House M.D., lives in apartment 221B.
- Danger Mouse, in the cartoon show of the same name, is said to live in a post box near 221b Baker Street.
- In the Lord Peter Wimsey stories by Dorothy L. Sayers, Lord Peter's London address is 110a Piccadilly, a homageVorlage:Citation needed to Doyle and Holmes.
- In the video game Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge, 221B Baker St. is one of the addresses Guybrush Threepwood can give when applying for a library card on Phatt Island.
- Shinichi Kudo, the protagonist of the Detective Conan series by Gosho Aoyama, resides in 2/21B Beika ("Baker" when transcribed to English) Street. Most landmarks and brand names in the series pay homage to this famous address as well, including the Beika Elementary School where Conan Edogawa studies.
See also
References
External links
- The Sherlock Holmes Museum
- The Baker Street Journal an Irregular quarterly of Sherlockiana
- 221B Baker Street Floor Plan Illustration
- ↑ Vorlage:Citation (Vorlage:Gutenberg).
- ↑ Vorlage:Citation.
- ↑ Sherlock Holmes 101, Washington Post, 11. Januar 2004