CHAPTER XII
Charles II Street
Charles Street—the name was changed to
Charles II Street in 1939—is first mentioned by name in the ratebooks of the
parish of St. Martin in 1672, although the intended
street already bore that designation in 1665 (see
page 77). The ground on both sides of the street
for two hundred feet east of St. James's Square was
part of the land granted freehold by the Crown to
the Earl of St. Albans's trustees in 1665. The
ground facing the remainder of the street formed
part of the land leased in 1661 by Henrietta
Maria's trustees to the Earl of St. Albans's trustees
for thirty years; subsequent grants extended this
term to 1740. In 1663 the Earl's trustees granted
seven leases of land in Charles Street; in 1664
they granted two more, in 1669 four, and in 1670
two, all for terms of between forty-two and fortyfive years. (ref. 1) Lessees included Abraham Story,
master mason, (ref. 2) Ralph Norris, who was perhaps a
relation of Francis Norris, bricklayer, (ref. 3) and John
Angier. (ref. 4) Ogilby and Morgan's map of 1681–2
and Blome's map of 1689 (Plates 2, 3) show
that the building of houses along both sides of the
street had then been completed.
In 1720 John Strype described Charles Street
as 'large and handsome'. (ref. 5) But at the east end of
the street the houses had low rating assessments
and owing to their proximity to St. James's Market were probably mean in character. The only
direct access from Charles Street to the Haymarket was through the yard of the Bell Inn.
The eastward extension of Charles Street is
closely connected with the history of the Opera
House (see pages 237–8). In or shortly after 1795
Thomas Leverton, who was architect to the Land
Revenue Department, (ref. 6) prepared plans for the improvement of the theatre which provided inter alia
for the extension of Charles Street to the Haymarket. (ref. 7) In 1799 the manager of the theatre,
William Taylor, obtained statutory powers for
this purpose, (ref. 8) but nothing was done until after the
passing of the New Street (i.e., Regent Street) Act
in 1813. John Nash's plans included a proposal
that the theatre should be enlarged and insulated
by widening the east end of Pall Mall and extending Charles Street to the Haymarket. The
execution of this scheme was completed in 1818
(see page 241).
The formation of Regent Street also involved
the demolition of a number of houses in Charles
Street, which was thereby divided into two
halves. The section of Regent Street between
Piccadilly and Pall Mall was completed in 1819. (ref. 9)
A list of distinguished residents and lodgers in
Charles Street is contained in the Appendix.
The Earl of Galloway's house
Demolished. Occupied the site of No. 29 Charles II
Street
A house for John Stewart, seventh Earl of
Galloway, in Charles Street is included in a list
published in 1815 of the buildings 'designed and
erected' by John Johnson (1732–1814). (ref. 10) Shortly
after his succession to the earldom in 1773 Galloway obtained a renewal of the Crown lease of the
house he then occupied on the south side of the
street, and of the adjoining house to the west, and
on this combined site a new house with a street
frontage of some sixty-three feet (ref. 11) was built in
1775–6. (ref. 12) In 1778 John Johnson exhibited at
the Society of Artists a design for the chimneypiece in the 'Drawing parlour' of the Earl's new
house. (ref. 13)
The Earl of Galloway occupied the house until
his death in 1806. He was succeeded by his son,
the eighth Earl, who lived there until 1820, (ref. 14)
except in the years 1809–10, when the house was
occupied by the Earl of Liverpool, then Secretary
for War and the Colonies and later Prime
Minister. (ref. 15)
In 1814 the Commissioners of Woods and
Forests decided that it would be necessary to buy
the Earl of Galloway's leasehold interest in the
house for the formation of Regent Street. (ref. 16) The
house itself was not demolished, but the adjoining
stable yard and offices were removed 'to make way
for the Buildings fronting the New Street', and in
c. 1820 the freehold of the house was sold by the
Commissioners to Pascoe Grenfell, M.P., for
£11,000. (ref. 17)
Pascoe Grenfell occupied the house until
1827, (ref. 12) when he was succeeded by the Archbishop of Armagh, who remained there until his
death in 1862. (ref. 18) He was succeeded by the Marquis of Waterford, who lived there until his death
in 1895. (ref. 19)
In 1896 the trustees of the Marquis of Waterford desired to sell the house, and the Commissioners of Woods and Forests, realizing that its
acquisition by the Crown would in due course
facilitate the satisfactory rebuilding of the adjoining houses in Waterloo Place, took the opportunity
to repurchase the freehold. (ref. 20) The house was
demolished in 1912. (ref. 21) The site is now occupied
by No. 29 Charles II Street, which forms the
return front of No. 11 Waterloo Place.
No representation of the house designed by
Johnson has been found.
No. 10 Charles II Street
In 1825 John Howell of the firm of Howell
and James, haberdashers and warehousemen of
No. 9 Regent Street, (ref. 22) purchased the lease of No.
10 Charles Street. (ref. 23) This house, which backed
on to his premises in Regent Street, was occupied
by Howell until 1834. (ref. 12) In 1833 it 'was redecorated outside with a neat cemented front,
and a novel doorway with frontispiece, which
often attracted the eyes of the passers-by'. (ref. 24) This
work was carried out by J. B. Papworth, whose
designs are in the library of the Royal Institute of
British Architects.
During the period 1826–34 Papworth was
also employed by Howell to carry out important structural alterations to the premises in
Regent Street, (ref. 25) and in 1838 the rear portion
of No. 10 Charles Street appears to have been
made to communicate with the shop in Regent
Street. (ref. 26)
From 1835 until 1877 No. 10 Charles Street
was occupied successively by John and Andrew
Lawrie of the firm of Lawrie and M'Grigor,
army agents. (ref. 27) In 1878 it was re-occupied by
Messrs. Howell and James and considerable
alterations were made. The work included the rearrangement of a number of rooms on the ground
and second storeys, the enlargement of the groundstorey windows, the insertion of new casements in
the windows of the second, third and fourth
storeys and the addition of a new upper storey.
The architect was Alexander Graham. (ref. 28)
Messrs. Howell and James occupied No. 10
Charles Street from 1877 to 1893. The house
was then divided. (ref. 22)
The front elevation is five storeys high (the
fifth being an added attic) and three windows
wide. The design is typical of Papworth—a neoclassical composition carried out in cement. The
ground storey contains the doorway on the left
of a large shop window, formed by removing the
pier between the original two windows. The surviving piers are simply rusticated and the doorway
has a cornice-hood projecting on scroll-consoles.
A cast-iron balcony extends in front of the three
second-storey windows, which are set in a framing
of pilasters, with panelled shafts and capitals of
fluting between acanthus leaves, supporting a
cornice. The middle window of the third storey
is dressed with a triangular pediment resting on
consoles, but the flanking windows, and those in
the fourth storey, have simple architraves. Below
the attic storey is an entablature consisting of a
plain frieze and a modillioned cornice returned
against each end of the front.
The Junior United Service Club
Demolished
The United Service Club was founded in 1816.
Its first permanent home was in the club-house
erected in 1817–19 at the north-east corner of
Charles Street and Regent Street. This building
proved too small and in 1827 it was sold to the
recently formed Junior United Service Club; the
United Service Club then moved to the new clubhouse at the south-east corner of Pall Mall and
Waterloo Place which it still occupies. The
Junior United Service Club rebuilt their clubhouse in 1854–7 and continued to occupy the site
at the corner of Charles Street and Regent Street
until the amalgamation of the club with the
United Service Club in 1953. The club-house in
Charles II Street was demolished shortly afterwards and its site is now occupied by the Atomic
Energy Authority of the United Kingdom.
The founder of the United Service Club was
Lieutenant-General Thomas, Lord Lynedoch,
better known as Lieutenant-General Sir Thomas
Graham. He took the chair at a meeting of senior
Army officers at the Thatched House Tavern in
St. James's Street on 31 May 1815, when it was
decided to 'form a general Military Club'. A
committee of management was formed, temporary
premises were taken in Albemarle Street, and the
first general meeting was held there on 13 January
1816. Shortly afterwards the application of the
Navy Club to join the new club was accepted, and
the name of the club was changed to the United
Service Club. (ref. 29)
On 22 February 1816 the newly established
committee of naval and military members appointed
(Sir) Robert Smirke to be the architect for the proposed permanent club-house. (ref. 30) The New Street
was then in course of construction, and on 14 May
the committee decided to accept the plot at the
corner of Charles Street on which the first clubhouse was later built. A week later Smirke submitted preliminary plans and the committee 'came
to an unanimous Resolution of Building accordingly and with as little delay as possible'. (ref. 31) The
United Service's was thus the first members' clubhouse to be built in London.
Its erection did not begin until March 1817,
the delay being perhaps caused by difficulty in
obtaining possession of the site. The building
contract, which provided for the completion of
the house by 11 October 1818 at a cost of £15,483,
was signed on 18 February 1817 (ref. 32) and on 1 March
a plate with the following inscription was attached
to the foundation stone: 'To Lieutenant General
Thomas Lord Lynedoch, Kt. & G.C.B. The
United Service Club as a memorial of the high
sense it entertains of his judicious action which
led to its establishment and of the zeal with which
he so beneficially devoted his unceasing devotion
to its interests has caused this plate to be inscribed
and to be deposited with the foundation stone of
their house on the 1st day of March and in the
fifty-eighth year of the reign of George the third
MDCCCXVII Robert Smirke, architect.' (ref. 33)
Smirke's contract drawings probably provided
for an extremely plain building. In August 1817
his suggestion that an extra outlay of £300 would
'enable him to improve the exterior Appearance
. . . very considerably by rising the parapit [sic]
Wall . . . and ornamenting the Walls' on the
Regent Street and Charles Street fronts, was
approved by the committee. (ref. 34) In March 1818 he
was authorized to erect 'a large and handsome
Balcony' and ornamental pillars on the Regent
Street front; the portico and balcony on the
Charles Street front appear to have been additions
decided upon at the same time, but they may have
been included in the contract designs of 1817 and
enlarged in 1818 to balance the extra embellishment of the Regent Street front. (ref. 35)
The club-house was opened for members on
1 February 1819. (ref. 36) The cost of the building only
was £19,406; with furniture and fixtures the total
expenditure was £32,234. (ref. 37)
Smirke's building (Plate 64) occupied an
oblong site, with frontages of 65 feet to Regent
Street and 100 feet to Charles Street. The principal rooms were contained in two lofty storeys,
and the kitchens, staff offices, etc., were in the
basement. Servants' sleeping quarters were contrived in mezzanines and, no doubt, in inwardfacing garrets. The plan was simple and, in
general principles, similar to Smirke's other clubhouses. The doorway, within the central portico
on the Charles Street front, gave access to the
entrance hall, with the steward's room on the
left (west) side, and a doorway at the end (north)
opening to the staircase hall where, behind a threebay colonnade, the stairs rose to the principal
floor. A doorway in the west wall of the staircase
hall opened to the middle bay of the three-bay
coffee-room, its windows overlooking Regent
Street and Charles Street. A corresponding doorway in the east wall of the staircase hall led into an
ante-room, with two parlours on the east and the
dining-room on the south, its windows overlooking Charles Street. This general arrangement of
rooms was repeated on the first floor, or principal
storey, with a large saloon on the west, a twincompartmented library on the south, and again
two parlours on the east.
The exterior was 'Grecian' rather than 'Greek',
bold in scale and sparsely ornamented, both fronts,
presumably, being of painted stucco. The 'principal front' to Charles Street was divided by
massive plain pilasters into three bays, and the
division between the two storeys was articulated
by a bandcourse, moulded between the pilasters.
The middle bay was the widest, with a Greek
Doric tetrastyle portico projecting from the ground
storey. The three tall rectangular windows of the
principal storey opened on to a balcony above the
portico, finished with railings of cast iron set
between stone or stucco pedestals. The windows
were without ornament but in the wall face above
was a long bas-relief panel representing 'Britannia
distributing rewards to naval and military heroes'. (ref. 38)
Each side bay contained two tiers of three closely
spaced windows, those of the ground storey being
tall and rectangular, those of the principal storey
having round-arched heads, with moulded archivolts rising from moulded imposts. A frieze of
anthemion ornament was introduced in the side
bays only, and the front was finished with a boldly
moulded Doric cornice surmounted by a pedestal
parapet. All the available evidence suggests that
the Regent Street elevation contained three large
round-arched windows, lighting the first-floor
saloon and opening on to a balcony above the
Doric colonnade which fronted the ground storey.
The interior appears to have gone unrecorded,
but remembering the low cost of the building, it
seems probable that simplicity ruled. The principal rooms would, no doubt, have had much the
same character as those in the Oxford and Cambridge University Club.
Smirke's building was not a success. In 1822
some £600 were spent on internal alterations and
the enlargement of the house was considered three
years later. At an extraordinary general meeting
in February 1826 it was decided that the impending demolition of Carlton House presented the
club with an opportunity which might never occur
again 'of procuring a situation where a new
House may be erected with every desireable
accommodation in lieu of expending money upon
the present building'. The committee was therefore authorized to procure a lease of a new site
and sell the existing house. (ref. 39)
The club-house was first offered, unsuccessfully, to the Travellers' Club. (ref. 40) On 24 March
1827, when the United Service Club's new
building in Pall Mall was in course of erection,
Captain J. E. Johnson held a meeting at the
British Coffee House in Cockspur Street to consider the establishment of a club to be called the
Junior United Service Club. His proposition,
which was read to the meeting, stated that it was 'a
matter of general complaint that while only Field
Officers are admissible to The United Service
Club all those below that rank have no similar
establishment to which they may resort', and that
the establishment of his proposed club would 'have
the effect of preventing young and inexperienced
officers from resorting to those haunts of excess
and dissipation of which so many have been the
deluded victims'. (ref. 41) The meeting was evidently
successful, for a provisional committee with
Johnson as chairman was formed, and only three
weeks later the United Service Club accepted the
offer of the Junior to purchase the club-house in
Charles Street for £15,000. (ref. 42) This offer was endorsed by the provisional committee of the Junior
at its meeting on 23 April 1827. Subsequently
the club moved into temporary quarters in Dover
Street until possession of the house in Charles
Street could be obtained. (ref. 43)
Captain Johnson was appointed secretary of the
club in April 1827, but his integrity seems to have
been questioned, and his connexion with the club
ended in the following July. (ref. 44)
In December 1827 Decimus Burton was
appointed consulting architect to the club.
Shortly afterwards doubts seem to have arisen as
to the suitability of Smirke's building as a home
for the club, but in March 1828 a general meeting
rejected a proposal to build a new club-house.
Possession of the building in Charles Street was
obtained in July 1828, (ref. 45) members of the United
Service Club being offered accommodation there
until the completion of their house in Pall
Mall. (ref. 46)
In 1830 Burton prepared plans for the removal
of the 'Heavy Colonnade and Balcony' which
darkened the coffee-room on the Regent Street
front, and for the enlargement of the parapet.
After some negotiation the Commissioners of
Woods and Forests sanctioned the removal of the
columns on condition that the parapet should be
replaced by a balustrade. It is not certain whether
this alteration was executed, but in the autumn of
1830 important modifications of the interior, including an entirely new staircase, were carried out
at a cost of £14,670, which was very nearly as
much as the club had paid for the purchase of the
building. (ref. 47)
Despite this heavy expenditure the accommodation provided in the club-house was evidently
inadequate and uncomfortable. In 1836, 1838,
1844 and 1850 the committee enquired whether
the Commissioners of Woods and Forests could
grant the club a larger site elsewhere. In 1847 a
proposal to purchase the adjoining St. Albans
Hotel and three houses in St. Alban's Place and to
build a new home on this much larger site was
thwarted by the exorbitant terms demanded by
the sitting tenants. (ref. 48)
In 1851, however, the leases of the three houses
in St. Alban's Place, and in 1854 that of the St.
Albans Hotel, were purchased at a total cost of
over £18,000 and in April 1854 plans for the
rebuilding of the club-house to the designs of
Thomas Cundy, junior, were submitted to the
Commissioners. (ref. 49) James Pennethorne, the Commissioners' architect, reported that Cundy's
elevation (ref. 50) provided for 'so large and magnificent a
Structure that every possible facility should, in my
opinion, be afforded for its erection'. (ref. 51)
Plans of the ground and first floors, and a perspective view of the exterior, show Thomas
Cundy's scheme for rebuilding the club-house. (ref. 50)
The plans reflect the influence of Charles Barry;
so, for that matter, does the design for the exterior,
which might fairly be regarded as a Victorian
adaptation of Inigo Jones's Banqueting House.
The ground-floor plan provides for a drawing-room overlooking Regent Street and a large coffee-room overlooking Charles Street. Between these
rooms is a small vestibule, with a short flight of
stairs rising to the top-lit hall, having an arcaded
corridor on three sides and an enclosed staircase at
its east end. East of the hall is the smaller coffee-room, and to the north lies the strangers' diningroom. On the upper storey is the writing-room,
over the drawing-room; the card-room, over the
vestibule, etc.; the library, over the large coffeeroom ; and the remaining space is largely taken up
by three rooms for billiards and smoking.
Cundy's plans were rejected by the club,
probably on grounds of expense, and at about this
time the committee obtained the option of first
refusal of the site of Buckingham House, Pall
Mall. This proposal was also rejected on the same
grounds, (ref. 52) and in July 1854 the building committee of the club authorized T. Marsh Nelson,
of the firm of Nelson and Innes, to submit plans
for alterations and additions to the existing clubhouse for the Commissioners' approval. (ref. 51)
Nelson's first plans (ref. 50) provided for the retention
of that part of the existing house west of the east
wall of the staircase, and for rebuilding in the same
style on the rest of the enlarged site. (ref. 51) These proposals were considerably modified and ultimately
the elevations of the new club-house as completed
in 1857 (Plate 65a) bore no resemblance to Smirke's
building. The positions of the entrance and staircase were not, however, altered, and owing to the
enlargement of the site they were no longer in the
centre of the Charles Street front. The builder
was George Myers of Belvedere Road, Lambeth. (ref. 53)
The foundation stone of the new building was
laid by the chairman of the club, the Earl of
Orkney, on 29 March 1855. The plate attached
to the foundation stone of the first building was
uncovered during the course of demolition. It
was relaid with the following inscription on the
reverse: 'The Club House built by the United
Service Club in the year 1817 was purchased by
the Junior United Service Club on its formation
in 1827, and occupied by the latter Club until
1854, when the original House was taken down
and a new Building erected on the site. The first
stone of the new House was laid on the twentyninth day of March in the 18th year of the Reign
of Queen Victoria. 1855.' (ref. 54) The caryatids on the
main staircase, the 'sculptured group allegorical of
the Army and Navy' which was placed above the
bay window on the Regent Street front, and some
other sculptural embellishments were the work of
John Thomas. (ref. 55) The stained glass above the
staircase was by Ballantyne of Edinburgh. (ref. 56)
During the rebuilding the club was temporarily
accommodated first at No. 15 St. James's Square
and latterly at the Wellington Hotel, St. James's
Street. The new club-house was opened on
3 March 1857. (ref. 57)
Two elevations, but no plans, have survived to
show T. Marsh Nelson's original designs for the
alterations and additions proposed in 1854 to be
made to Smirke's building. (ref. 50) The middle and
west bays of the Charles Street front are retained,
with some minor changes of detail (pediments
added to the three windows of the middle bay and
an open balustrade instead of the pedestal-parapet)
which might, in fact, have already been made by
Decimus Burton. The extension on the east side
contains a large and lofty room on the ground
storey, and a dome-roofed room above. The wide
pilasters, Doric cornice and crowning balustrade
of the then-existing building are repeated in the
elevation of this addition, which is a composition
of three bays, one very wide between two narrow,
that on the east side not carried up to the full
height. The middle bay contains, in the ground
storey, a segmental bow window of three lights,
set between two round-arched windows; above is
a range of five round-arched windows, similar to
those in Smirke's front but placed at a much
higher level. The narrow flanking bays have one
round-arched window in each storey. Smirke's
front to Regent Street was to be altered by removing the Doric colonnade and forming a bow
window in the middle of the ground storey.
Again, it is possible that part of this work had
already been carried out under Burton's direction.
An account of the new club-house, designed by
T. Marsh Nelson, appeared in The Builder, (ref. 58)
from which some of the facts in the following
description have been derived. Nelson's plans
were much more simple and direct than those
prepared by Cundy, who probably worked to the
same programme. The enlarged site was L-shaped, fronting 65 feet to Regent Street, 135 feet
to Charles Street, and 115 feet to St. Alban's Place.
From about half-way along the Charles Street
frontage, the west part of the ground storey was
taken up by the hall and staircase, 32 feet wide and
53 feet deep, with a doorway in its west wall
opening to the large morning-room, 30 feet wide
and 63 feet long, having a large bay window
overlooking Regent Street (fig. 51). A corresponding doorway in the east wall of the hall
opened to the members' coffee-room, 41 feet
wide and 66 feet long, with an even larger bay
window to Charles Street. Opposite the bay, and
behind a screen of paired columns, was the visitors'
coffee-room. At the rear of the site, the arrangement of which was subsequently altered, was the
smoking-room, 54 feet long and 22 feet wide, lit
by a dome of painted glass. Between the smokingroom and the visitors' coffee-room was the house
dining-room, various bars and serveries. The
principal rooms on the first floor followed the
same pattern. The evening-room was over
the morning-room, the writing-room over the hall,
and the library over the members' coffee-room.
The basement contained the members' dressingand bath-rooms, etc., on the west part of the site,
the rest being taken up by the kitchens and staff
offices. Sleeping quarters for the staff were in the
roof storey.

Figure 51:
Junior United Service Club, Charles II Street, ground-floor plan
Architecturally, the building was best described
by the adjective 'imposing'. The elevations (Plate
65a) were faced with Bath stone and detailed in
the high Italian Renaissance manner, but the composition was undistinguished and the scale rather
overwhelming. The ground-storey face was
horizontally channelled, the upper face was of
plain ashlar, the angles were quoined, and over all
hung a beetling cornice, richly detailed but taken,
it appears, from fig. 947 in Gwilt's Encyclopaedia. (ref. 59)
The ground-storey windows were dressed with
architraves and cornices resting on consoles, and
the asymmetrically placed entrance was framed in a
boldly rusticated archway. The first-floor windows had full tabernacle-frames with, alternately,
triangular and segmental pediments. The twostoreyed bay in the centre of the Regent Street
front was most elaborate, each storey being dressed
with columns, pilasters, and entablatures, Doric
below and Corinthian above. The middle window
of each storey was round-arched and adorned with
a carved mask-keystone and spandrels, those of the
upper storey extending into the tympanum of an
open segmental pediment. Above the blockingcourse was a group symbolizing the army and the
navy, carved by John Thomas.
The interior was decidedly eclectic in style.
The Viennese Baroque of Fischer von Erlach and
Lukas von Hildebrandt must have inspired the
hall—with its monumental doorcases, bracketed
entablature, and screen of Ionic columns with
swagged capitals—and the grand staircase (Plate
65c) which rose with a central flight to the halflanding, passing under an arcaded screen supported
by caryatids, and returning in parallel flights to the
first floor. Curiously enough, the railing was of
a debased anthemion pattern and the caryatids,
placed back-to-back, were 'Grecian'. The
morning-room was also Baroque, with panelled
pilasters and deep consoles supporting the main
cornice. The members' coffee-room and the
library were more sober in form, but rich in
ornament, with columns and pilasters of scagliola
—Ionic in the coffee-room and Corinthian in the
library—and elaborate compartmented ceilings.
The evening-room also served as the club's
picture-gallery.
In 1869 the club purchased some adjoining
premises in St. Alban's Place and in the following
year this new space was used for the construction
of improved domestic accommodation. At the
same time the interior of the club was redecorated
under the direction of Mr. Moody of the South
Kensington Museum. (ref. 60) In 1903–4 servants'
dormitories were built on the St. Alban's Place
front, the architect being John Johnson. (ref. 61)
In 1914–15 the crowning cornice was raised
above a new attic storey added by Sir Aston Webb,
an improvement to both the accommodation and
the appearance of the building (Plate 65b). The
contractors were Trollope and Son. The whole
of the new floor was used for members' bedrooms
and bath-rooms, and on the ground floor a ladies'
dining-room was provided. (ref. 62) The total estimated
cost was £35,000. (ref. 63)
On 10 December 1952 extraordinary general
meetings of the United Service Club and the
Junior United Service Club were held simultaneously, and at both meetings resolutions
approving the amalgamation of the two clubs were
passed by overwhelming majorities. The amalgamation took effect from 1 February 1953. (ref. 64) The
Junior United Service Club house was subsequently vacated, and it was demolished in 1955. (ref. 65)
The site is now occupied by the Atomic Energy
Authority of the United Kingdom, whose
premises were designed by Trehearne and Norman Preston and Partners, in association with
Leslie C. Norton; the builders were Trollope and
Colls.