Early Development of Rutland Gate,
1836–c. 1847
In January 1836, as Rutland House was being demolished,
the first of several agreements was made with Elizabeth
Manners, as de facto freeholder, for developing the estate,
and by the end of the following year much of the northern
half of the ground had been let as building plots. (ref. 10)
Development had been in mind for some years, and in
1832 a plan of the Brompton road area had shown the
southern part of the ground marked out for building along
lines similar to those subsequently adopted. (ref. 11) The scheme
eventually drawn up by Mrs Manners' surveyor, the architect Edward Cresy the elder, is shown on a rather perfunctory plan which he submitted with an application to
build sewers in October 1836. (ref. 12) Cresy's scheme was for a
wide road through the middle of the ground, divided into
two carriageways by a central communal garden running
its full length, and lined on either side by continuous
terraces of houses. Short terraces were to occupy the
frontages to the Kensington road. At the south end, side
roads were planned so that the estate could be linked up
with developments present or future on adjoining properties. The central roadway, following the alignment of the
ground, took an offset bend which, together with the nearness of Hyde Park, presumably suggested the original
name of the development: Serpentine Terrace.

Figure 56:
Rutland Gate in the mid-1860s
The first prospective builder on the scene was George
Crowne of Foley Place, Marylebone, who undertook to
construct a dozen houses on the north-eastern sector of the
ground. But at the end of 1836, having built nothing, he
sold his interest to the architect (Sir) Matthew Wyatt. (ref. 13)
Nine houses were ultimately erected under Crowne's
agreement, some on widened plots, together with coachhouses and stabling in Upper Rutland Gate Mews (now
Gate Mews). Three of these houses, Nos 3–7, were leased
jointly to Wyatt and his partner John Howell in December
1837. Leases of six more houses, Nos 1 and 9–17, were
granted to Howell almost exactly two years later. (ref. 14)
(fn. a) A party
to these latter leases was John Tombs, who was by then
under agreement to build houses on ground south of No.
17, and on the west side of Serpentine Terrace. He was,
very likely, the executant builder of all nine houses, which
had been completed and occupied by 1840. (ref. 16)
Tombs's address was then in Church Street, Millbank,
but he had been in business for some years previously in
Southwark, initially in partnership with Thomas Tombs:
they had described themselves variously as bricklayers,
builders and timber merchants. Another member of the
family, George Tombs, a plasterer, was living at No. 18 in
1841 and was presumably involved in the building work. (ref. 17)
In 1840–1 John Tombs was the ratepayer at No. 12 Rutland
Gate, which was probably being occupied as a site office. (ref. 18)
On the north-western sector of the ground, building was
largely carried out under two agreements, dated May 1836
and October 1837. The first was made with Thomas Ross
esquire, of Blackheath (who developed much of Blackheath
Park in the 1820s and '30s). (ref. 19) Ross undertook to build four
houses (Nos 2–8) fronting the Kensington road. Two of
these houses were subsequently leased to him, and the
others by his direction to George Ross, possibly Thomas's
brother, a surveyor based near Tombs's old home in Southwark. (ref. 20) As with the corresponding eastern range, the site
had originally been earmarked for five houses. The second
agreement, taken out by Tombs, covered the sites of Nos
12–20 on the west side of the new road, and a large plot, for
eight houses, on the east side, just on the bend. (ref. 21) Leases of
Nos 12–18 were taken up by Tombs in May 1838 and
immediately mortgaged to Cresy, who, at the same time,
himself took the lease on No. 10, which may be presumed
to have been built for him by Tombs. (ref. 22) In September,
Tombs took the lease of another new house, No. 20. (ref. 23) Like
Howell, Tombs financed his venture through the London
Assurance Corporation, to which he was able to report, in
July 1840, that four of his houses were finished, and two of
them let. (ref. 24) Apart from No. 10, which remained empty until
1845, the houses were soon occupied. (ref. 25)
Although Tombs's involvement with Rutland Gate continued for some years, he did not build the intended houses on the east side of the road. By August 1839 he had made
only a small incursion into his site there, in the form of a
coach-house and stables at the north-east corner, for
Thomas Ross. (ref. 26) The remainder of the plot was made over
to William Jones, a rich Monmouthshire landowner and art
collector, as the site for a big detached mansion known as
Clytha House which was leased to him in 1840. Early in the
following year Jones took two building plots on the other
side of the road (the sites of Nos 22 and 26, and Rutland
Gate Mews). They were separated by a larger plot already
under agreement to another art collector, John
Sheepshanks, also for a detached house. (ref. 27) The building of
these two free-standing houses (separate accounts of which
are given below) was the first important departure from
Cresy's original development plan.
Jones's Clytha House and Sheepshanks's future house strongholds of dissimilar artistic tastes – might have faced
each other across the neutral zone of the communal garden,
but within a few weeks of acquiring the plots of Nos 22 and
26 Jones obtained a sweep of additional land to the west and
south of Clytha House, taking a large bite out of the eastern
roadway and the garden. (ref. 28) The upshot was a further modification of the layout, constricting the middle portion to a
single roadway with no garden 'reservation', and giving the
development its distinctive hour-glass shape (fig. 56). It
was now in effect two garden squares, with the large houses standing in their own gardens forming a 'buffer zone'
between them. The northernmost square was already more
or less complete; its intended counterpart was slightly recast to have a semi-circular south end, with terrace-houses
or detached villas occupying the two quadrant sites on
either side of the entrance into a mews. (ref. 29)
It was at about this time that the name Serpentine
Terrace – having thus become less apt – was changed to
Rutland Gate. With its aristocratic connotation this had a
grander sound. The entrance to the development was now
railed and gated (the original plan had been for an open
junction with the main road), and provided with a gatekeeper's or gardener's lodge, but a hoped-for entrance
across the road into Hyde Park did not materialize. (ref. 30)
(fn. b)
The lodge, a stuccoed building, with an attached
order of palm-headed columns similar to those on the
porticoes of Tombs's houses in Rutland Gate, stood in
the upper garden slightly forward of the general building
line (Plate 73a). It was demolished in 1969, having
been allowed to become semi-ruinous. (ref. 32)
(fn. c)

Figure 57:
Nos 1 and 3, formerly Nos 1–7 (odd) Rutland Gate, 1837–9; elevation in 1997. Attic storey reconstructed in the 1970s
In 1841 the northernmost of William Jones's two plots
on the west side of Rutland Gate was leased to the Hon.
Edward Villiers, a brother of the 4th Earl of Clarendon,
who occupied the new end-of-terrace house there (No. 22)
until his death in 1843. (ref. 34) Jones's other plot was partially laid
out by Tombs as Rutland Gate Mews, but apart from a
stable for Villiers it was not built up until about 1845. (ref. 35)
Tombs, by then resident in Chelsea, followed this in
1846–7 with a substantial, and to all intents and purposes
detached, house (No. 26), partly overlooking the planned
new church on the Kingston House estate. It seems to have
been Tombs's last work at Rutland Gate. The house was
evidently built speculatively, for, writing to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in January 1847, Tombs stated that it
would be of the full size for a second-rate house, 'and will
therefore be occupied by a family of the first respectability'. Although large, it had no garden, unlike Clytha House
and No. 24. The lease was taken in due course by a City
solicitor, Frederick Pratt Barlow, previously the first occupant of No. 17. (ref. 36) In the 1920s and '30s No. 26 was the
London residence of Lord Redesdale, the father of the celebrated Mitford sisters. During Lord Redesdale's day the
house was little-used, the rooms dust-sheeted for months
on end. It was requisitioned for housing evacuces from the
East End during the Second World War, and fell into disrepair before being restored by Patrick De Laszlo, son of
the society portrait-painter Philip De Laszlo, who made
the ballroom available for Conservative party meetings. In
the late 1960s the ballroom was transformed into a private
cinema, as part of a Hollywood-style remodelling of the
interior carried out for Richard Gangel, the American
friend and business associate of the financier Bernie Cornfeld. When their company Investors Overseas Services collapsed and Gangel went bankrupt, the house was put on
the market for a then record sum, attracting some attention
for the extravagance of its decorations and fittings. (ref. 37)
South of Clytha House, the development had continued
in 1842 with a pair of plain semi-detached villas set back
from the originally intended building line (see Plate 7).
Who built them is not known. These modest houses, then
numbered 21 and 23, were first occupied in 1843, by the
artist and (later) royal drawing-master Edward Henry Corbould, and an architect, John Forbes Hardy, Corbould's
house, No. 21, like its bigger neighbours Clytha House and
No. 24, incorporated a 'gallery' – in his case, probably more
a working studio. (ref. 38) The pair was rebuilt by John Elger in
1857–8 as Nos 23 and 25 (see below).
In 1847–8 more houses were proposed, perhaps started, (ref. 39)
but by then, with the building trade in recession, the first
phase of Rutland Gate's development was effectively over. (fn. d)
The architecture of upper Rutland Gate
As built, upper Rutland Gate presented two contrasting
faces to the passer-by. At the north end, overlooking the
park, were two showy ranges with fully stuccoed palazzastyle façades, ultimately deriving from Nash's Regent's
Park terraces (fig. 57, Plates 34a, 73a, 74a, 77a). By contrast
the houses behind were much plainer, with predominantly
brick facades (Plate 74b). There were, in addition, comparatively minor differences in treatment between the two
northernmost ranges and between the two ranges to the
south. The estate surveyor, Edward Cresy, must have
approved of the contrasting styles, but who was responsible for the actual designs is not known.
Matthew Wyatt, as a prominent architect who is known
to have designed the houses on his own development at
Victoria Square, is an obvious candidate. George Ross, the
surveyor who took the leases of Nos 2 and 4, may himself
have made some architectural contribution. The northeastern range, Nos 1 7, which Wyatt developed jointly
with John Howell, had the more sophisticated façade of the
two terraces fronting the Kensington road, but its design
may have been his improved version of that at Nos 2–8
rather than an original concept of his own. Certainly, the
decision to make the north-western range of four not five
houses (the wider frontages making it possible to erect
houses on a somewhat grander scale) had been taken by the
time of Thomas Ross's building agreement in May 1836.
Wyatt is not known to have had any involvement in the
development of the estate until December 1836, when he
bought out George Crowne's interest on the as yet virtually untouched north-eastern corner. He too proceeded to
build a row of four houses facing the Kensington road,
rather than the five stipulated in Crowne's agreement.
Wyatt's houses at Nos 1–7 were distinguished from Nos
2–8 by the varied shapes of window used, the greater
degree of stucco enrichment, and the breaking forward of
the end houses to give the effect of pavilions.

Figure 58:
No. 10 Rutland Gate, 1838, ground-floor plan
The plainest of all the houses were those comprising the
eastern range, Nos 9–17, of which only Nos 9 and 11 survive. These houses all had the comparatively narrow
frontages indicated on Cresy's original development plan.
Although here too fewer houses were built than first
intended, the plots were not enlarged, the spare ground
being taken for coach-houses in what is now Gate Mews.
On the opposite side of the road, Nos 10–22 are built on
wider plots and have a more ornamental treatment, with
string-courses and stuccoed window surrounds (Plate
74b). The bow window at No. 14 is a 1920s addition, and it
is probable that No. 22 in its original form was not very different from the rest. A feature common to the houses on
both sides of the road is a pillared portico with distinctive
palm capitals.
Whether Cresy's role of estate surveyor included architectural design in any detail is not known. Possibly he
designed the porticoes of the east and west ranges, and it
seems likely that he was responsible for the planning of No.
10, of which he was the lessee (though not the occupant).
While conforming in elevation to its neighbours, this house
is distinguished by a semi-circular staircase (fig. 58). The
design of contemporary staircases was a subject on which
Cresy developed strong views – dismissing those in most
English houses as too much like stepladders, but also criticizing the French taste for radial plans on the grounds of
safety and convenience. (ref. 40)
The plans of the other houses, on both sides of the road,
seem to have been entirely unremarkable, with conventional dog-leg staircases. (ref. 41)
The detached houses at the southern end of the development show a greater diversity. Of the three, No. 24, while
lower in height and alone in having a bow at the front, was
originally closet in appearance to its northern neighbours,
with a brick front and the standard portico. Clytha House
was wholly stuccoed with a symmetrical plan, semi-circular bays and a grand Ionic portico. No. 26, Tombs's last
house, also originally stuccoed, was angular and asymmetric with a Doric portico. It has, apart perhaps from the
treatment of the windows, no particular stylistic resemblance to his other houses. The balconies at Nos 24 and 26
have similar cast-iron balustrading, with plain supports at
No. 24 and ornate brackets at No. 26.
Clytha House, No. 19 Rutland Gate (demolished)
Built around 1840 for William Jones (later Herbert), a
Roman Catholic landowner and art collector, this neo-classical mansion was the largest house in Rutland Gate.
Named after Jones's Monmouthshire estate, it stood well
back from the road, in the centre of a large plot on the east
side of the street originally allocated for a row of eight
houses (fig. 56). Latterly the building was screened from
view by trees. The site is now occupied by an inter-war
block of flats called Eresby House.
Little is known about the construction of Jones's mansion, first occupied by him in 1841, and the only illustrations appear to be some distant glimpses in general views
(Plates 6b, 7). From these, and written sources, it emerges
as a stucco-faced house of two storeys plus an attic, square
on plan, with a full-height tetrastyle Ionic portico on the
north front and a picture gallery with bowed ends at the
back. (ref. 42) In certain respects the house seems to have been
modelled on Jones's neo-classical country seat, Clytha,
which had been rebuilt for him in the 1820s by Edward
Haycock, the Shropshire-based architect. There is, however, no documentary evidence to connect Haycock, or
any other architect, with the Rutland Gate house.
The principal rooms were all on the ground floor.
Arranged en suite for the reception of company, they comprised 'a handsome entrance paved with variegated marble
opening to a vestibule', two drawing-rooms 'uniformly and
superbly embellished by a celebrated foreign artist', 'a
noble saloon or picture gallery with embayed ends and
costly parquetrie floor' and a 'grand eating room'. (ref. 43) The
unidentified foreign artist could have been Jones's friend
Ludwig Grüner, the Dresden-born painter and engraver.
Grüner seems to have been living at Clytha House when in
October 1842 he witnessed Jones's signature, signing himself 'Lewis Gruner of Rutland Gate, engraver'. (ref. 44)
(fn. e)
The accommodation on the upper floors comprised a
lady's morning room and seventeen bedrooms and dressing-rooms. The 'ample and convenient' domestic offices
and servants' apartments included a separate stable and
coach-house at the south-east corner of the site. (ref. 46)
Jones's occupation of this expensive house was relatively
brief. In 1852 he withdrew to Monmouthshire, put Clytha
House on the market, and disposed of the paintings and
other contents at auction. (ref. 47) The lease was bought in June
1853 by Lord Edward Howard, another Catholic landowner,
who in 1869 was created Baron Howard of Glossop. (ref. 48) Lord
Howard occupied No. 19 (the name Clytha House fell into
disuse) until his death there in 1883, and the house remained
in the hands of his descendants until c.1912. (ref. 49)
The succeeding owners were an American couple, Dr
Fred Stark Pearson and his wife, Mabel, on whose behalf it
was purchased in 1914 by a trust company. Dr Pearson was
an electrical engineer and entrepreneur, who had made his
fortune through a series of public works enterprises including the electrification of the tramcar systems in New York
and Boston, and the construction of hydroelectric-power
stations around the world. He also had interests in mining,
railways, forestry and irrigation.
With Thomas Henry Smith as their architect, the Pearsons embarked on an expensive modernization and
enlargement of the by-then rather shabby and old-fashioned house. Smith raised the height of the building, which
he extended on three sides, leaving only the north front
unchanged. In the process Jones's bow-ended gallery was
subsumed into a large oblong music-room-cum-drawingroom, at the east end of which there was to have been a
grand organ with its pipe-chamber in the basement below. (ref. 50)
The Pearsons never lived here, however. In May 1915,
while work was still in progress, they were lost when the
liner Lusitania, on which they were returning to England
from New York, was torpedoed off Ireland. After some
delay their representatives decided to complete the
'rebuilding' with a view to selling the house, which was
bought in 1916 by the 2nd Earl of Ancaster. (ref. 51) The earl lived
here until 1931, during which time No. 19 was known as
Eresby House, after one of his titles. By April 1931 plans
were already afoot to build a block of flats on the site (see
Eresby House below) and the old house succumbed to the
demolition contractors in 1932. (ref. 52)
No. 24 Rutland Gate: Park House
Distinguished by a conspicuous bow rising through four
storeys, this is the house, now much extended, built in 1841
for John Sheepshanks, the art collector and former Leeds
cloth manufacturer, who occupied it until his death in 1863
(fig. 59, Plate 74c). (ref. 53) After retiring early from business,
Sheepshanks had settled in London, in Bond Street and
later at Blackheath. In the 1830s, having built up and disposed of an unrivalled collection of Dutch and Flemish
prints, he began acquiring contemporary British paintings,
which his new house in Rutland Gate, with its integral picture gallery, was designed in part to display. In 1857 he presented this collection, which included several Constables
and Turners, to the nation.

Figure 59:
No. 24 Rutland Gate, built for John Sheepshanks in 1841, and extended north and south in 1899–1900. Room-names are those in use c.1911, during the residence of Baron d'Erlanger
When new, No. 24 was fully detached and had fewer
storeys, as is shown in a bird's-eye view of the area in 1851
(Plate 7). The present top storey and, almost certainly, the
second storey are later additions. Justifying his reluctance
to admit visitors to the collection, Sheepshanks, a bachelor,
explained that the house was 'of limited dimensions' with
'only a very small establishment of servants'. (ref. 54) One visitor
whom Sheepshanks did not discourage was Henry Cole,
the future first Director of the South Kensington Museum, to which the collection was entrusted in 1857. On one
of his regular trips there, in February 1845, Cole was
accompanied by Turner.
The house was originally faced in brick, yellow malms
being specified in the building agreement for the front elevation (now mostly stuccoed) and grey stocks for the
remainder. (ref. 55) Even with a brick façade, No. 24 must always
have stood apart from its northern neighbours on account
of its bow and, originally, its much lower height. That it has
the standard pillared porch may be due to the estate surveyor, Edward Cresy, to whom the plans had to be submitted for approval, rather than to Sheepshanks's (unknown)
architect. A possible candidate for this role is the surveyor
George Ross. As has been seen, Ross and his relation
Thomas Ross, a developer in Sheepshanks's former home
district, Blackheath, were both involved in the early development of Rutland Gate.
All the principal rooms are on the ground floor. In
Sheepshanks's day these comprised, besides the entrance
hall, a drawing-room, dining-room and breakfast-room,
and, in a single-storey wing to the south, the 'well-lighted'
picture gallery. Sheepshanks's paintings were not confined
just to the gallery, but hung in all the principal rooms. (ref. 56)
After Sheepshanks's death, the house was occupied by
Eric Carrington Smith, a prominent banker and notable
patron of the Vernacular Revival architect George Devey.
It was presumably Smith, a family man with seven children
and a large domestic staff, (fn. h) who had the extra storeys built:
a substantial increase in the rateable value of the house in
1864 doubtless reflects this addition. (ref. 58) The main staircase,
still in the house today, was extended in matching style:
early Victorian in character, with restrained iron balusters,
it rises seamlessly from the hall to the top floor. Soon after
taking up residence Smith laid a path across his garden to
All Saints' Church in Ennismore Gardens, with gates
which he opened for a short time before and after services
for the convenience of local churchgoers. (ref. 59) Smith's successor here in 1885 was William Sheepshanks MP, a greatnephew of the original owner.
The next occupant, from 1899, was Baron Frédéric
d'Erlanger of the well-known international banking family, some other members of which, including his father,
were already living in Rutland Gate. Baron Frédéric successfully combined the careers of banker and composer. No
less a virtuoso than Fritz Kreisler premiered his violin concerto, and his operas, though now sunk without trace, were
heard at Covent Garden and in opera houses across Europe
and in America.
The present appearance of No. 24 owes much to the
alterations and additions carried out for d'Erlanger in
1899–1900 by Green & Abbott of Oxford Street, a decorating firm. (ref. 60) At the southern end d'Erlanger built a large
single-storey dining-room next to Sheepshanks's gallery,
which became his music-room, and at the northern end he
added a four-storey extension, closing the gap between
No. 24 and No. 22. The stuccoing of the front elevation up
to third-floor level probably also dates from this time.
Jalousies and some faintly Art-Nouveau-style windows in
the old gallery and new dining-room testify to the Parisianborn d'Erlanger's essentially French taste. Internally this is
exemplified in the plasterwork and panelling of the principal rooms, latterly painted white but originally gilded. (ref. 61)
D'Erlanger lived at No. 24, which he named Park House,
until his death in 1943. Post-war occupants have included
Frank T. Sabin, the fine-art dealers (1948–63), and the
Accademia Italiana delle Arti e delle Arti Applicate
(1989–94). During the Accademia's time the ground floor
was regularly used for exhibitions.