The Development of the Frontage
Not much is known about the development and early
appearance of this part of what was until the 1750's
promiscuously called the Tyburn, Uxbridge, Oxford or
Worcester Road. From 1721 the road was administered by
a turnpike trust which set up a gate at the junction with
Park Lane (then Tyburn Lane). The stretch west of the
Banqueting House Bridge, which carried the road across
the Tyburn stream near the present corner with Davies
Street, was until 1770 surfaced merely in gravel and not
such as to encourage speedy development. Close to the
narrow bridge itself, the road was execrably maintained,
and 'carts were daily overturning there' before the
turnpike trust was able to improve matters in the 1730's. (ref. 1)
Another inhibition was an old water pipe running parallel
to the road a little to its south, from the corner with
Tyburn Lane. This carried water to the City of London
from springs at Paddington; there were conduit heads at
two points, just east of the corners with North Audley
Street and Park Street, and tenants of the buildings
eventually erected along its length were obliged to allow
access to the system. (ref. 2)
Consequently, the original takers of plots with frontages
towards the Oxford Road in the 1720's were inclined to
view this district as back land and let it out for building
gradually and piecemeal. The background of Sutton
Nicholls's engraving of Grosvenor Square, which should
not be taken too literally but offers a rough indication of
progress in the 1730's, still presents a very rural
appearance along the road. Rocque's map of 1746 shows
that building had then progressed only as far as North
Audley Street; but there was still a large gap at the corner
with Davies Street, where buildings were not erected until
the 1750's (ref. 3) (Plates 1, 2, 5a in vol. XXXIX).
More rapid changes began after 1760, following the
development of the Portman estate along the north side of
Oxford Street west of Marylebone Lane. The land
between North Audley Street and Park Lane was now at
last developed, by agreements of 1764–5 with John
Spencer and John Phillips, carpenters. (ref. 4) West of Park
Street, Phillips was able to organize the building of some
distinctly fashionable private houses including Camelford
House (Plate 69a, 69b, 69c), and Hereford Street was squeezed
in here.
The developments between North Audley Street and
Park Street were simpler, but Tallis's view shows one
striking house, then No. 252, which stood on a narrow
frontage close to Park Street. Though first built in about
1769 by Joseph or Joshua Saunders, carpenter, (ref. 5) its elegant
plan and façade, with a curving porch on columns, a
pedimented window on the first floor and a Diocletian
window, were doubtless the result of alterations by his
architect son George Saunders, whose office was at this
address until his death in 1839. (ref. 6)
Of the buildings illustrated by Tallis, one other is worth
notice, the then No. 269 between Queen (now Lumley)
Street and George (now Balderton) Street. This was the
Oxford Street front of the extensive works of Joseph
Thrupp, the most enduring of several firms of coachbuilders established hereabouts, and latterly called
Thrupp and Maberly. The building had perhaps been
inserted in about 1810 in place of a simple archway leading
into the works. Tallis in 1838–40 shows a three-storey
building with a shop front and round-headed windows
above recessed in giant arches at second-floor level. In
1857–8 the building was extended and the façade given a
weighty Italianate treatment by the architects F. J. and H.
Francis, which, however, reproduced the giant arches (ref. 7)
(Plate 45b). It may parenthetically be noted that Oxford
Street tradesmen who were also manufacturers and
occupied premises west of George Street, were quite tidily
accommodated, having good back access to their workshops from North Row, a lane close behind. But for Joseph
Thrupp and other large businesses east of George Street,
there was no convenient mews behind because of the
casual way in which this sector had been developed; so
their premises tended gradually to sprawl back and
encroach upon once-independent houses in the side
streets. (ref. 8)

Figure 42:
Oxford Street, the Grosvenor estate frontage in c. 1838–40. All demolished
To return to the progress of eighteenth-century Oxford
Street, in 1770 maintenance of the road was transferred to
the St. Marylebone Paving Commissioners, who immediately paved this sector and brought it up to the high
standard of the rest of the street. (ref. 9) By 1780 the frontage up
to Park Lane was completely developed, and public
executions having shortly afterwards ceased at Tyburn,
any stigma still attached to this western end was removed.
Oxford Street now enjoyed its first heyday as a centre for
retailing, and it became fashionable to promenade along its
whole length. One foreign visitor, Sophie von La Roche,
records her impression in 1786. 'Just imagine … a street
taking half an hour to cover from end to end, with double
rows of brightly shining lamps, in the middle of which
stands an equally long row of beautifully lacquered
coaches, and on either side of these there is room for two
coaches to pass one another; and the pavement, inlaid with
flag-stones, can stand six people deep and allows one to
gaze at the splendidly lit shop fronts in comfort … Up to
eleven o'clock at night there are as many people along this
street as at Frankfurt during the fair, not to mention the
eternal stream of coaches. The arrangement of the shops in
good perspective, with their adjoining living-rooms, makes
a very pleasant sight. For right through the excellently
illuminated shop one can see many a charming familyscene enacted: some are still at work, others drinking tea, a
third party is entertaining a friendly visitor; in a fourth
parents are joking and playing with their children.' (ref. 10)
There was, however, one development of this time, the
St. George's Market, which certainly detracted from local
salubriousness. This was a butchers' market founded in
1785–6 without any agreement with Earl Grosvenor in a
quite restricted yard between James (now Gilbert) Street
and Davies Street, with access at either end from Oxford
Street and Chandler (now Weighhouse) Street. It was the
project of Henry Tomlinson, a plumber and glazier of St.
Marylebone with interests in the development of Hans
Town. Tomlinson took a thirty-five-year lease of the
ground and erected what must have been twenty very
small houses. (ref. 11) Complaints soon arose from the inhabitants
of the Grosvenor Market (see page 68), which was erected
at just this time very close by in Davies Street and was
officially supported by Earl Grosvenor; and in 1791, when
St. George's Market was put up for sale, they petitioned
the Earl to suppress it. (ref. 12) Nevertheless the market
continued until the original lease ran out, at which time
Tomlinson's houses disappeared. Even then St. George's
Market did not die out, and butchers and cheesemongers
were to cluster in this part of Oxford Street and stalls were
to encumber passers-by for many years, attracting
unfavourable comment from The Builder as late as 1867. (ref. 13)
The construction of Regent Street from 1813 onwards
considerably diminished the lustre of Oxford Street as a
fashionable thoroughfare, and for the next fifty years the
Grosvenor estate's part of it was in decline. There were a
number of rebuildings of commercial premises, some of
them visible on Tallis's illustrations, but nothing of real
consequence. Among the shopkeepers who advertised on
his drawings was the aptly named Mary Mash, potato
dealer. No. 260 between North Audley Street and Park
Street was between 1806 and 1852 occupied by the
speculative architects and surveyors Robert William
Jearrad senior and junior and Charles Jearrad. The
Jearrads were most famous for their developments in
Cheltenham, but Charles and the younger R. W. Jearrad
were successively surveyors to the St. George's Vestry.
The family performed some minor works on the estate,
though not apparently in Oxford Street. (ref. 14)