Salisbury Court was named after the medieval house and garden of the Bishops of Salisbury, which stood on the east side of Water Lane.
His father, a well-known printer, then of Salisbury Court, Fleet Street, had abbreviated the family name at the time of the 1745 rebellion.
Salisbury Court was the last theatre to be built before the closing of the theatres in 1642, during the Puritan era.
Lovell died in Salisbury Court, Fleet Street, on 27 December 1818.
He moved to the Red Balls in Salisbury Court off Fleet Street.
After the execution of the king in 1649, Dorset is said never to have left his house in Salisbury Court, Fleet Street.
Occasionally there were other new companies like Beeston's Boys, and new theatres like the Salisbury Court.
Brome's Sparagus Garden was a huge success at the Salisbury Court in 1635, earning over £1000.
From 1861 until 1911, the house was usually known as Rose Bay Lodge; it has also been known as Salisbury Court.
The second office is located on Salisbury Court, near Chancery Lane in the City of London.