The Lesser Estates
The plan illustrating the pattern of land ownership before
1851 (fig. 1) shows that there were about a dozen lesser holdings in the area
besides the three large estates so far described. In addition there were two
places of long-established settlement, in the vicinity of Gore Lane and at the
eastern end of Cromwell Lane, where the estate pattern had been largely blurred
by the middle of the nineteenth century.
On some of these lesser estates significant building
development had already started by 1851, and their history is described
separately, e.g. the Lee estate (now Clareville Grove area, Chapter II), and
the Campden Charities' Butt's Field estate and the adjoining land once
belonging to J. F. Hanson (now Hyde Park Gate and Kensington Gate, Chapter
III). The history of the remaining lesser estates before 1851 is described
below: their building history is described in Chapter XXII, with the exception
of Palace Gate (laid out on the site of Noel House and its grounds) which is
described in Chapter III.
Eden Lodge
Demolished
As has already been stated, the Gore House estate once
formed part of a larger holding which stretched, in present-day terms, from the
Albert Hall in the west to Ennismore Gardens in the east. Most of this large
estate was copyhold of the manor of Knightsbridge with Westbourne Green, and in
the late seventeenth century the copyhold part was divided into two, the land
later occupied by Eden Lodge and its grounds lying at the western edge of the
larger, or two-thirds, share, which was acquired by Henry Hassard or
Hazard. (ref. 131)
In 1744 John Swinhoe, then the owner of Brompton Park
Nursery, obtained the copyhold tenure of the land, which was already largely
occupied by the nursery, from Hazard's grandson, also named Henry Hazard. (ref. 132) Swinhoe disposed of some parts of his new
estate, but the bulk of it eventually descended to his grand-daughter, Olivia
Searle. (ref. 133) She died in 1844, bequeathing
part of her copyhold property to Mrs. Mary Plummer, widow of John Plummer,
esquire, of Bedford Square. (ref. 134)
Among the possessions to which Mary Plummer succeeded was a
mansion standing in about two and a quarter acres of grounds, then on lease to
George Eden, Earl of Auckland, and known as Eden Lodge. In 1847 Mrs. Plummer
sold the copyhold of the house and grounds to a trustee for Lord Auckland for
£9,280. (ref. 135)
Eden Lodge had been built in c. 1745
and first occupied by John Swinhoe. (ref. 113)
Later occupants whose names appear in the parish ratebooks include Isaac Corry,
the Irish politician, the second Earl of Rosse and James Stephen, Master in
Chancery, the grandfather of Sir Leslie Stephen. (ref. 136) In 1842 George Eden, second Baron (and recently
created first Earl of) Auckland, took up residence in the house on his recall
from the position of Governor-General of India, having apparently already
acquired a leasehold interest in the property some time previously. (ref. 137) On his death in 1849 the Barony (but not
the Earldom) passed to his brother, Robert John Eden, then Bishop of Sodor and
Man and later Bishop of Bath and Wells, (ref. 68) and his estates were bequeathed to trustees for the
Bishop and his two sisters. (ref. 138)
The Commissioners for the Exhibition of 1851 were
particularly anxious to purchase Eden Lodge in order to secure possession of
all of the land within the rectangle formed by Queen's Gate, Cromwell Road,
Exhibition Road and Kensington Road, but the Bishop, who handled the
negotiations, refused to sell because his sister, Emily Eden, had made her home
at Eden Lodge and the house had been specifically reserved for her use under
the Earl's will. Shortly after her death in 1869 the copyhold was enfranchised
for £6,000 and the house and grounds were sold by the Bishop's successor
to William Lowther. (ref. 139) Eden Lodge was
demolished soon afterwards for the building in 1873–5 of Lowther
Lodge, now the home of the Royal Geographical Society (see page 327).
Mary Plummer's copyhold estate
The process whereby Mrs. Mary Plummer, a widow, came to
acquire the copyhold interest of land to the east of the Gore House estate has
been described above. After the sale of Eden Lodge and its grounds in 1847 Mrs.
Plummer was left with approximately eleven and a half acres, including an
irregularly shaped tongue of land which provided a narrow frontage to
Kensington Road. The tenants had for many years been successive proprietors of
Brompton Park Nursery, and a seed shop stood on the frontage to the main
road. (ref. 140)
In 1851 the builder Charles James Freake contracted to buy
Mary Plummer's land, and after purchasing the copyhold enfranchisement from the
Dean and Chapter of Westminster in 1852 for £3,680, she sold the estate
freehold to Freake for £24,000, equivalent to more than £2,000 per
acre. (ref. 141) Freake, who then laid out
Exhibition Road in part through his new property, entered into arrangements
with the 1851 Commissioners for the rationalization of their respective
holdings in the vicinity of the new road. These are described on page
57.
Gore Lane area
The northern parts of the Harrington-Villars and Gore
House estates were separated from each other by a wedge-shaped piece of land
situated on either side of Gore Lane (Plate 2a), which
extended southward from Kensington Gore. Some form of settlement had existed
here for a considerable time, this part of Gore Lane (or Park Lane as it was
also sometimes called) having been known as The King's Gore in the seventeenth
century. (ref. 33) The northern end of Jay Mews
follows the course of the lane and represents all that survives of it. By the
mid nineteenth century there were over fifty houses and cottages along Gore
Lane and this portion of the south side of Kensington Road, ranging from the
humblest tenements to stuccoed terrace houses of some architectural
distinction. In addition there were public houses, schools and even a police
station. The chief proprietors were Lord Kensington and John Aldridge.
Lord Kensington was the freeholder of all of the property
on the west side of Gore Lane and some on the east side, the land here having
no doubt originally been waste or common of the manor of Earl's Court, which
had descended to him from Sir Walter Cope through his ancestors the Earls of
Warwick and Holland. (ref. 142)
John Aldridge owned the terraces of houses on the south
side of Kensington Road between Gore Lane and Grove House. He had inherited
them from his father and their sites had probably formed part of the
possessions of Humphrey Tomlinson, from whom the descent of the Gore House
estate can be traced. (ref. 143) The houses
consisted of two groups of six, divided from each other by the boundary between
the parishes of Kensington and St. Margaret, Westminster. The westerly terrace,
known as Nos. 1–6 Lower Kensington Gore, dated from at least the
1760's, (ref. 144) although there were houses
on the site at an earlier date. (ref. 145) The
eastern terrace was built under an agreement of 1829 between Robert Aldridge
Busby, John Aldridge's father, and George Newen, gentleman. (ref. 144) Called Hyde Park Terrace, it had replaced a group of
older houses and consisted of a symmetrical composition of six four-storey
stuccoed houses, the terrace ends being brought forward as pavilions and
treated with a Corinthian order of pilasters; a central pediment was inscribed
'Hyde Park Terrace' (Plate 79b). (ref. 146) The overall effect was very similar to a later
terrace built by Grissell and Peto at Nos. 5–8 Hyde Park Gate (see
page 34). Most of the houses in Hyde Park Terrace and Nos. 1–6
Lower Kensington Gore, renumbered as 11–22 (consec.) Kensington
Gore in 1879, survived (some in considerably altered form) until the erection
of new buildings for the Royal College of Art in 1960. <William Boyce, the composer, lived in Lower Kensington Gore from at least 1768 until his death in 1779.>
Aldridge also owned the copyhold interest of the site of
the police station to the south of the mews behind Hyde Park Terrace. He had
purchased the copyhold tenure, held of Knightsbridge manor, for £1,200 in
1829, and obtained its enfranchisement, with the rest of his copyhold land, in
1852. (ref. 147) On the east side of Gore Lane,
to the south of the police station, a two-storey brick and timber dwelling
called Ivy Cottage stood in about one third of an acre of grounds. This house,
which was owned directly by the Dean and Chapter of Westminster, was leased to
John Inderwick, the pipe-merchant and developer of Kensington Gate, although he
did not live there himself. (ref. 148) The
parochial authorities of Kensington owned the National School which was
situated on the west side of the police station. A pesthouse had been built at
this spot in the plague year of 1665 by the lord of the manor of Earl's Court,
and had afterwards been adapted as almshouses for the poor of Kensington
parish. In 1758 the almshouses, which were then in a ruinous state, were
rebuilt. For several years after 1803 they were used to provide homes and a
rudimentary education for female children who would otherwise have been
accommodated in the parish workhouse, but on the building of a large new
workhouse in 1847–9 they were converted into a parish school
conducted under the principles of the National Society. In 1857 the
Commissioners for the Exhibition of 1851 bought the school, the £800
which they paid being used in 1860 towards the purchase of a site in Church
Court and the building of a new school for girls which now forms part of St.
Mary Abbots School. (ref. 149)
After the properties along the lane were acquired by the
1851 Commissioners (ref. 150) most of the
buildings were quickly demolished and virtually no trace of this small
'village' now survives.
The Smith's Charity Carpet Ground
The total extent of the estates in or near Kensington
owned by the trustees of Henry Smith's charity amounted to approximately
eighty-five acres, almost all of which were outside the area described in this
volume. The charity had been established under the will of Henry Smith,
alderman of the City of London, dated 1627. This provided that two sums of
£1,000 each were to be spent in the purchase of land, the rents and
profits of which were to be used for the relief of the 'poore Captives being
slaves under the Turkish pirates', and for the relief of the poorest of his
kindred. Claimants under the first provision soon proved hard to find, but by
the nineteenth century several of Smith's descendants were receiving money from
the charity. (ref. 151)
The detached part of the estate, consisting of about two
and three quarter acres between the Gore House and Harrington-Villars estates
in the parish of St. Margaret, Westminster, was known in the mid nineteenth
century as the Carpet Ground, presumably through the practice of beating
carpets there. (ref. 4) In the late seventeenth
and early eighteenth centuries, however, it had, in common with much of the
surrounding land in the area, formed part of Brompton Park Nursery. (ref. 152)
The 1851 Commissioners after some negotiation were able to
acquire this parcel of ground by offering in exchange an outlying
three-and-three-quarter-acre piece on the south side of Old Brompton Road which
had formerly belonged to the Harrington-Villars estate.
Noel House
Plate 79a. Demolished
This house, whose site is now wholly occupied by Palace
Gate, was built in 1804 for George Aust, Secretary to the Royal Hospital at
Chelsea. The architect was George Byfield. (ref. 153) Its three-and-a-half-acre site was leased to Aust for ninety-nine years in February 1805 by Gerard Noel Noel, who had inherited the property from his father, Gerard A. Edwards. (ref. 154) Six years later Aust bought the freehold. (ref. 155)
The house was remarkably plain and simple in design.
Although only three storeys high with a semi-basement and a full attic storey
contained within the mansard roof it presented an impression of unusual height.
Full-width balconies on both the north and south fronts provided almost the
only architectural decoration. Internally there was a lofty entrance hall with
open galleries to both the first and second floors. The house was set back from
Kensington Road among pleasure grounds laid out by Aust's wife, Sarah, who
under the name of the Honourable Mrs. Murray had published a guide book to the
'Beauties of Scotland'. (ref. 156)
Aust died in 1829 and under the terms of his will Noel
House passed to his second wife, Catherine, for life, with a reversion to his
cousin, Robert Brymer Stanser. (ref. 157) In
November 1861 the building firm of William Cubitt and Company purchased the
estate from one of the trustees of Robert Stanser's will, demolished the house
and laid out the site for building (see page 38). (ref. 158)
The Mills' Charity estate
This small estate of some four acres was situated close to
the north side of Old Brompton Road (fig. 1). In March 1736 this land and the
two houses then standing on it were conveyed to trustees by the Reverend
Richard Mills of Perivale (in enlargement of a charity previously established
by his mother), for the benefit of the poor of the parishes of St. Giles,
Cripplegate, and St. Luke, Old Street. (ref. 159) In the mid eighteenth century part, at least, of the
estate was in the tenure of Henry Hewitt, one of the nurserymen of the
area. (ref. 160) In 1828, when the tenant was
William Wightman, it provided an income in rent of £90 per annum for the
charity. (ref. 161)
To the south of the Mills' Charity estate was a narrow
strip of land, formerly waste ground, (ref. 161) which fronted on to Old Brompton Road and on which
several small buildings had been erected. This strip was at one time held on
lease by the trustees of Mills' Charity, and later came into the possession of
Charles James Freake, the builder, who, at the time of the development of the
estate in the 1870's, conveyed it to the trustees in exchange for building
plots on the east side of Queen's Gate (see page 301). Its site is now entirely
contained within the widened roadway of Old Brompton Road.
William Dryden's land
The two small estates, each approximately one acre in
extent, which lay to the east of the Mills' Charity lands (fig. 1) had
constituted one holding in the mid eighteenth century, and were again united in
1851 when Thomas Dowbiggin, the freeholder of Bute Street, purchased the
adjoining plot from its then owner William Dryden. (ref. 162)
In 1762 Joseph Bates of Chelsea, a shopkeeper, sold the
two acres to David Burnsall of St. George's, Hanover Square, an auctioneer. (ref. 160) Within two years Burnsall had leased the
western half of this land to Jacob Leroux, the architect and speculative
builder, at a rent of £25 per annum after a two-year peppercorn term. (ref. 163) Leroux built a terrace of five houses,
presumably to his own designs, along the frontage to Old Brompton Road. (ref. 164) This terrace, known as Prospect Place,
was demolished in 1875 for the erection of the present Nos. 48–60
(even) Old Brompton Road.
Bute House
Demolished
In 1769 David Burnsall (see above) granted a
ninety-nine-year lease of the eastern half of his two-acre holding at an annual
rent of £34 to James Adam of St. George's, Hanover Square, architect, (ref. 165) brother of the more famous Robert Adam.
At that time there were two houses on the site, but a mortgage deed of 1776
contains the information that Adam demolished one of them, converted the other
into outbuildings, and erected a new house. (ref. 166) In this deed he is described as 'of Brompton', and
the appearance of Mr. (sometimes James) Adam or Adams in the ratebooks during
the years 1770 to 1781 also indicates that this new house was built for his own
occupation. In 1782, when Adam sold the house for £1,000, he was
described as 'late of Brompton but now of Robert Street in the Adelphi'. (ref. 167) Although James is not listed among the
occupants of Robert Street in the ratebooks for that year, Robert Adam was
rated for No. 3. (ref. 168) Their biographers
generally state that the Adam brothers combined their residential and business
premises during these years, firstly at Lower Grosvenor Street until 1772 and
then at various houses in the Adelphi, (ref. 169) but James clearly possessed a 'country' villa at
Brompton as well. No drawings relating to the house have been found, and,
unfortunately, no illustration of it has come to light. The house is shown on
various large-scale maps, the earliest of which is Starling's map of 1822, and
its approximate shape from the evidence of these is shown on fig. 1, but there
is no certainty that it had not been altered since erection. When advertised
for sale in 1823 it was described as 'a singularly elegant and compact
Leasehold Villa, constructed by Mr. Adam, the architect, according to the
Italian taste', and as having been 'planned and constructed at great
expense'. (ref. 170)
Between 1795 and c. 1804 the house
was occupied by the first Marquess of Bute, (ref. 95) and was subsequently known as Bute House. In 1833 it
was purchased by Thomas Dowbiggin, head of the famous firm of upholsterers
responsible for Queen Victoria's state throne in 1837. (ref. 171) Dowbiggin may have lived in the house himself at
first, (ref. 95) but by 1841 it was in the
occupation of Viscount Ingestre (later third Earl Talbot and subsequently
eighteenth Earl of Shrewsbury) who probably continued to live there until he
moved to Brompton Park in 1845. (ref. 172) In
that or the following year the house was demolished.
Between 1846 and 1848 Dowbiggin and his associates, John
Newson of Grosvenor Mews, builder, and Joseph Clutterbuck of Kensington Gravel
Pits, brickmaker, laid out Bute Street along the length of the former grounds
of Bute House, leases being granted to half-a-dozen builders who erected two
rows of three-storey stucco-fronted houses. (ref. 173) Of these the only survivors are the Zetland Arms
public house at the east corner of Bute Street and Old Brompton Road, and its
counterpart on the west corner, both evidently built by Edwin Curtis of
Bayswater. (ref. 174) The latter building, now
Nos. 44–46 (even) Old Brompton Road (Plate 81c), was originally a pair of houses and shops and was
first occupied in 1847 by a chemist and a china merchant. (ref. 175) On its Bute Street elevation it retains a blocked
shop front framed with reeded pilasters. When the Metropolitan and Metropolitan
District Railways were constructed in 1865–8 under the present
course of Harrington Road the northern end of Bute Street was swept away. The
rest of the street was largely rebuilt in two phases, c.
1953–4 and c. 1965–6, but
uniformly and still to a modest scale with small residences over shops.
Brompton Hall
Plate 78a. Demolished
Brompton Hall, which stood at the junction of Old Brompton
Road and Cromwell Lane, probably dated from the sixteenth century, but the
details of its early history are obscure. In his history of Chelsea of 1829,
Thomas Faulkner, when recounting the tradition of the origin of the name
Queen's Elm, refers extensively to Brompton Hall. 'Queen's Elm', he writes,
'derives its name from having afforded accidental shelter to Queen Elizabeth,
while on a visit to Lord Burleigh, at his neighbouring residence, now called
Brompton Hall. This house, now inhabited by Mrs. Griffiths, the widow of the
Rev. Joseph Griffiths, still retains some marks of its ancient splendour. There
was, till lately, a grand porch at the entrance. The hall, or saloon, is a step
lower than the rooms upon the same floor. The diningroom has a richly carved
ceiling of oak, displaying in the centre the rose and crown, and in its other
compartments the fleur de lys and portcullis; and on taking down some ancient
tapestry a few years since, the arms of Queen Elizabeth, carved in oak, and
curiously inlaid with gold, were discovered above the chimney-piece. There is
also, in another room, the relics of a very curious old wainscot, in small
compartments. The house, since it came into the possession of Mr. Griffiths,
has been modernized and considerably improved. That it was originally the
residence of Lord Burleigh, there is scarcely a doubt; and that his Lordship
was occasionally honoured with the visits of his Sovereign, is extremely
probable, from tradition still preserved, and well known in the
neighbourhood.' (ref. 176)
The extent of the 'modernization' by the Griffiths family,
who lived in the house for over fifty years, (ref. 95) can be seen by the illustration of Brompton Hall in
the mid nineteenth century (Plate 78a). The tradition
that Burghley had lived there must, however, be treated with caution. It seems
unlikely that any residence of his, particularly one where he was visited by
the Queen, would not have been recorded among the considerable body of
surviving material about his life. Shortly before his death Burghley did,
however, acquire some land in Brompton as part of the extensive estate attached
to Winchester (later Beaufort) House in Chelsea, which had been bequeathed to
him by Lady Dacre in 1595, but the location of this land is not known. (ref. 177)
The course approved in 1864 for the Metropolitan and
Metropolitan District Railways between Gloucester Road and South Kensington
stations passed through the grounds of Brompton Hall and part of the building
itself lay within the limits of deviation. (ref. 178) The railway companies purchased the property, but
the house was not demolished until the land surplus to their requirements was
sold to speculative builders in 1874.
Cromwell Lane area
The small area to the north of Brompton Hall, on each side
of Cromwell Lane, was divided between several owners including Lord Kensington.
In the 1860's the frontages to the lane were taken up with small houses and
shops, including a carpenter's and farrier's premises and a beershop and
dining-rooms. (ref. 178) Most of the buildings
were simple brick vernacular structures of no more than two storeys in height
(Plate 77c). Some of these were swept away when the
underground railway was constructed in 1865–8, and others were
demolished when the north side of Harrington Road, which was laid out over the
course of the railway, was developed in the last quarter of the nineteenth
century.