CHAPTER XLVII. AMONG THE COALYARDS AND THE MEAT-MARKETS
ARRONDISSEMENT XIX. (BUTTES-CHAUMONT)
IN this essentially workaday district we see many houses old and
quaint, but without architectural beauty or special historic interest.
Round the park des Buttes-Chaumont, a large expanse of greenswards and
shady alleys, dull, squalid streets branch out amid coal-yards and
factories. Beneath the park are the ancient quarries which erewhile
gave so much white stone and plaster of Paris to the city builders. The
name Chau-mont is derived, perhaps, from mom calvus, mont chauve, i.e.
bald mountain. In Rue de Flandres, formerly Grande Rue de la Villette,
we see a Jewish cemetery. Nos. 61 to 65 are on the site where the
well-known institution Ste-Perine, come hither from Compiègne,
was first established in Paris as a convent community in the
seventeenth century, removed to Chaillot in 1742, then to Auteuil, its
present site. We find ancient houses, some old signs, along the course
of this old street, and at No. 152 an interesting door, pavilion and
bas-relief.
Rue de Belleville marks the bounds of the arrondissement. Along its
course and in the adjacent streets we see many vestiges of the past.
Rue des Bois shows us some fine old gardens as yet undisturbed. In Rue
de l'Orme, Elm Road, opening out of it, we find the remains of an
ancient park. Rue Pré-St-Gervais was a country road till 1837.
From the top of the steps in the picturesque Rue des Lilas we have a
fine view across the neighbouring banlieue. In the grounds of
No. 40 we come upon three benches formed of gravestones. Rue Compans
was in the eighteenth century and onwards Rue St-Denis. The church of
St-Jean-Baptiste, quite modern, is of excellent style and workmanship.
The lower end of Rue de Belleville leads us into arrondissement XX.
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