No. 17 Soho Square
The early history of the house on this site has
been described above with that of No. 12. Dr.
Samuel Rich was living here in 1692, (ref. 33) and in
1694–5, (ref. 96) and Lady Fanshaw from at least 1703
to 1706. Other inhabitants include Sir Orlando
Bridgeman, third baronet, M.P., later Governor
of Barbados, 1707–9; Esquire Lockhart,? George
Lockhart, Jacobite and author, 1712–14; William Legge, first Earl of Dartmouth, 1716–18;
Sir Thomas Seabright, fourth baronet, M.P.,
1719–31; Captain James Compton, 1757–64;
Dr. Thomas White, 1782–7, and George Walker, novelist, bookseller and publisher, 1820–47. (ref. 33)
There is no indication in the ratebooks that the
house built in the late 1670's was ever entirely
demolished, but the present aspect of the building
suggests that it was thoroughly renovated in the
early nineteenth century. The front is of yellow
stock brick, three windows wide and four storeys
high (Plate 71a). The ground floor is faced
with rusticated stucco and the entrance is set in a
round-arched opening with a decorative fanlight.
The first-floor windows open on to a balcony with
an ornamental wrought-iron balustrade, and a
plain parapet screens the slated roof. Internally,
the fittings are typical work of the early nineteenth
century. The hall is simple with an inner doorway to the stair compartment. The joinery is
similar to that at No. 14, but the architraves are
finished with wreathed stops instead of lionheads, and the plain but elegant open-well staircase is of finer quality. Several chimneypieces
survive; in the two rooms on the ground floor
they are of grey marble, with panelled members
and roundel stops; on the first floor they are of
white marble, the members again panelled but
with fruit and flower carving to the tablet and
stops.
References
| 33. |
R.B. |
| 96. |
G.L.R.O., WCS 677/1. |