Silver Street, London

51°31′02″N 0°05′40″W / 51.51735°N 0.09454°W / 51.51735; -0.09454 Silver Street was a street in London. It ran from the north end of Noble Street at Falcon Square to Wood Street. It originated in medieval times, and is one of the streets shown on a map known as the "Woodcut map of London" or the "Agas" map, which survives in a 17th-century version.

Its inhabitants included the Mountjoy family with whom William Shakespeare lodged at the beginning of the 17th century. According to Charles Nicholl, who has written a detailed analysis of Shakespeare's life on Silver Street, their house can be identified on the "Woodcut map". The Mountjoys were Huguenots who ran a business making luxury headgear for ladies, including theatrical costumes.

Another resident was John Wolfall, who lived there in the 1590s. Ostensibly a skinner, Wolfall´s main activity was arranging loans.

During the Second World War the Cripplegate area, where the street was located, was virtually destroyed in the Blitz.