The Occupants
The standard of respectability among the
occupants was higher than that of the architectural
façades they lived behind. Virtually without
exception the residents here were put (or put
themselves—it is not clear which) into the Post
Office Court Directory, and the area in its heyday
was overwhelmingly a stronghold of the haute
bourgeoisie.
The rate of occupation
These big houses were not taken at an even or
evenly accelerating pace. The Post Office Directory
may be used as a guide, though an imperfect
one. (The date of occupation has here been taken
as one year earlier than the first year of occurrence
in the Post Office Directory.) The houses began to
fill up in c. 1857, and in the year 1860 35 houses
received their first occupants. This number fell
to 11 in 1862, rose to 26 in 1864 and remained at
some 20 to 26 a year until 1869 when it rose to
32. The greatest influx was in 1872 when 50
houses were first occupied. It fell to only one in
1879, and then continued at a very low fluctuating
level until the area was completely built up and
occupied in 1901. (By then, of course, big blocks
of flats were also in occupation.)
In terms of its occupants, therefore, this is an
area of families that in the main moved into new
houses between, say, 1859 and 1877. The opening
of a temporary church for the Queen's Gate
Gardens area in 1866 (ref. 363) and then permanently
as St. Stephen's, on the other side of Gloucester
Road, in 1867, was no doubt as important as the
opening of St. Augustine's, Queen's Gate, in
1871. (An unexecuted proposal by C. J. Richardson
had been for an iron church, in the plainest
'Gothic', to be built on Lord Harrington's land,
but this had probably been intended only for the
duration of the 1862 Exhibition. (ref. 364) ) In 1872 a
post office was opened in Exhibition Road, a little
south of the present office. (ref. 365)
The figures seem to confirm the comparative
slump in the house market at the time of the 1862
Exhibition and also the importance of the opening
of the South Kensington Station at the end of
1868. They explain the optimism of estate
developers in the early 1870's.
The early inhabitants
Many of the first residents had moved from
another address in London. Where this was can
sometimes be discovered with greater or less
certainty from the Post Office Directory. The likely
address is known for some 138 residents who
moved in between the later 1850's and c. 1876. Some
35 came from southern Kensington (or Westminster
south of Knightsbridge), some 23 from
Belgravia (including Chelsea north of Sloane
Square), 22 from Bayswater or northern Kensington,
20 from Mayfair or St. James's, 10
from St. Marylebone or Regent's Park, 6 from
Pimlico and 22 from the rest of London. The
figures are not very striking but suggest a readiness
to move comparatively short distances and
from districts that were themselves quite recently
built up.
The average age of the male householder when
he first moved in has, for the main streets and
squares, been estimated from the 1871 census and
the Post Office Directory. He was already middleaged,
about 45 or 46 years old, varying from 40
or 41 in the moderate-sized houses of Stanhope
Gardens to 51 or 52 in Cromwell Road.
His stability of tenure once he moved in is
difficult to assess against a criterion. Eighteen out
of fifty houses listed in the 1861 census still had
the same householder in 1871. On the north side
of Queen's Gate Terrace in 1875, seventeen out
of twenty-three adjacent householders had been
there for nine years or more: in 1872 four
adjacent neighbours in Queen's Gate Gardens
had been unchanged for eleven years. Perhaps
Nos. 64–72 Princes Gate in Exhibition Road
were the most stable in their occupants. All nine
remained unchanged for the eight years 1879–86
and eight adjacent houses for twelve years: five
houses remained in the same families' occupation
for twenty-five years or more from 1873—a
situation comparable to St. James's Square in the
eighteenth century. Generally in the area, however,
there was much less permanence than here.
Some at least of the shopkeepers put down roots
in this profitable soil. At eleven adjacent premises
at Nos. 17–35 (odd) Gloucester Road (Plate 84b)
there were only three changes from 1860 until
1877 or perhaps later. (fn. a)
The structure of households in the principal
streets in 1871
The most detailed evidence at present available
about the way the households of the early residents
in this part of South Kensington were made up is
provided by the census taken in 1871. (ref. 366) By that
time the building of a large proportion of the
houses had been completed, and most of them
were occupied. The tables on pages 357–64 give
the individual name of each householder, his
occupation where known, and information about
the other members of his household. They show
that in those streets under consideration 297
houses, none of them as yet subdivided, were in
occupation, and that in the nine mews there were
139 inhabited coach-houses.
The householders in these 297 houses included
nine peers, three dowager peeresses and ten sons,
daughters or daughters-in-law of peers. Four of
the peers (including the Duke of St. Albans and
the Earl of Durham) lived in Cromwell Road, and
four others in Queen's Gate, while in Queensberry
Place Prince Murat (son of the Napoleonic
marshal) and his son had taken temporary refuge
in two adjacent houses during the FrancoPrussian
War and the Commune. There were
also six baronets and nine knights. Nineteen of
the householders were Members of Parliament,
one of them, H. A. Bruce, being Home Secretary,
and two others junior ministers. Twenty-seven
of the 297 householders are known to have
owned a country seat as well as a town house
here, and it may confidently be asserted that others
did so too.
Twenty-seven householders were or had been
army officers. Fifteen of these were of the rank
of lieutenant-colonel or above, and they included
one peer, one peer's son, one baronet and four
knights. The navy was sparsely represented by
two admirals and a captain, while the Home Civil
Service's small contingent of four householders
included two inspectors of hospitals. The civilian
administrators of India seem, however, to have
regarded this part of South Kensington as an
appropriate place for retirement or in which to
take a house during their periods of leave. The
twelve who found a home here in 1871 included
Lord Lawrence, the former governor-general of
India, Sir William Grey, lieutenant-governor of
Bengal, and Sir Frederick Halliday, member of
the Council for India. At least eight of them
were in retirement, and of these eight, one had
set up as an East India merchant and two others
were practising in the field of law.

Figure 84:
(facing page). Mews arches, elevations, sections and plans
Except for lawyers, professional men were not
numerous, there being four doctors and surgeons,
three clergymen, two civil engineers, one of whom
also described himself as a railway contractor, two
artists (J. E. Millais and the baronet Sir Coutts
Lindsay) and one 'architect' (Antony Gabrielli,
member of a firm of contractors). The lawyers,
however, with forty-one householders, provided
the largest single occupational group in the area.
Twenty-seven of them were barristers, of whom
six had dual occupations, such as 'barrister and
landowner'; eleven were solicitors, and there was
also one law agent (formerly an Indian civilian),
one magistrate, and one county court judge, the
latter being a baronet. Baron Cairns, of No. 29
Cromwell Road, had already served as Lord
Chancellor under Disraeli, and was to do so
again. Two other barristers were Members of
Parliament, one of them, Sir Richard Baggallay,
of No. 55 Queen's Gate, having been SolicitorGeneral
in 1868, a post which he was to hold
again in 1874 before becoming AttorneyGeneral.
Only thirteen householders may be classed
broadly as industrialists, of whom four had dual
occupations, e.g. barrister and newspaper proprietor.
Four were brewers—Edward Charrington,
Richard Courage, Augustus Perkins and
Samuel Whitbread, M.P. Three were substantial
builders active in the locality—C. J. Freake,
William Jackson and John Spicer—and three
more were mine- or quarry-owners. The other
three were J. E. Taylor, proprietor of The
Manchester Guardian, and Robert Dalglish, a
calico printer of Glasgow, for which he was
Member of Parliament, and John Aiton, the
railway contractor and civil engineer referred to
above. Mrs. Dorothea Baird of No. 4 Queen's
Gate may also be mentioned among the industrialists,
being the widow of Francis Baird,
formerly proprietor of the Baird Ironworks at St.
Petersburg. Thus actual factory-owners were
very few.
The men of commerce were considerably more
numerous, and indeed if their varied activities are
grouped together they outnumbered even the
lawyers. There were six bankers (one of whom,
John Stapleton, M.P., also described himself as a
barrister), and one each of the following: publisher,
auctioneer, estate agent, steamship-owner,
colonial broker, army agent, chairman of a life
assurance society, and professional gambler. This
last was Henry Hill of No. 52 Queen's Gate
Terrace, who had graduated from being general
factotum for Lord George Bentinck to the
ownership of his own string of racehorses and to
extensive speculation on the Stock Exchange.
But the thirty merchants formed by far the largest
category within the commercial group. Two of
them—both Scots—were also Members of
Parliament, and at least half of them were
engaged primarily in foreign trade. These included
four trading with India (one of whom had
evidently retired from the Indian Civil Service),
three with China and one with both India and
China. Trade with America, Australia, Sweden
and the West Indies was represented by one
merchant each, and there was also one 'colonial'
merchant. About a dozen other members of this
group of thirty merely described themselves as
'merchant', but some of them no doubt had
extensive foreign interests, notably C. L. Norman,
a partner in the firm of Baring Brothers.
Another eighteen householders described their
'rank, profession or occupation' in the census
schedules as 'annuitant', 'fundholder', 'rentière',
or similarly. Of these, twelve were women. Two
of the men specified house property as the source
of their income, and another combined 'investments'
with land ownership. Eight other men
(including one Member of Parliament) described
themselves as 'gentleman' or of 'no occupation'.
Lastly there were the landowners. Eighteen
householders, of whom three were Members of
Parliament, described themselves simply as landed
proprietors, and another eight combined landownership
with another occupation, such as the
army, the bar, brewing or coalmining. For
reasons to be given below, however, these figures
understate the extent of the landed interest among
the householders of the area.
The table below expresses the information
given above about householders' 'rank, profession
or occupation' as percentages of the 297 households
under consideration. The number of landowning
householders is, however, considerably
understated. None of the nine peers resident in the
area described themselves as landowners, and so
have not been included in the table among the
twenty-six landowning householders. Yet among
these peers were such great landed magnates as the
Duke of St. Albans and Lord Methuen, each of
whose estates was worth over £10,000 per annum
in 1883. Moreover, commoners resident on the
night of the census did not always describe themselves
as landowners when they nevertheless had
good claim to do so. A case in point is Henry
Bruce, the Home Secretary, who owned lands in
Glamorganshire worth £12,113 in 1883. Another
is Frederick Milbank, M.P. for the North Riding
of Yorkshire and owner in 1883 of lands there
and in Durham worth £19,094 (on the grouse
moors of which he once shot ninety-five brace of
birds in twenty-three minutes). The landowners,
in fact, formed a considerably more numerous
group than the figure of 8.8 per cent given in the
table would suggest.
It is also evident that the sources of the great
wealth needed to acquire and maintain a large
house in this part of South Kensington were often
mixed, revenues from land, for instance, being
frequently associated with income of industrial or
commercial origin. In this field precision is impossible,
but a few examples may nevertheless be
cited. In 1883 the third Earl of Durham's lands
in Northumberland and Durham were worth
over £71,000 per annum, but nearly 90 per cent
of this came from the coal mines beneath them,
as, no doubt, had been the case when his father,
the second Earl, had lived in Cromwell Road in
1871. Edward Charrington of Queen's Gate
Gardens described himself as a brewer and
insurance company director as well as a landowner,
while both Lord De L'Isle and Dudley of
Queen's Gate (family estates worth £10,232 per
annum in 1883) and the Hon. Robert Grosvenor,
also of Queen's Gate (later second Baron Ebury,
family estates worth £5,803 per annum in 1883),
were in 1896 directors of several public companies.
|
|
Householders' 'rank, profession or occupation',
1871
(fn. b)
|
|
% of 297 householdes |
| Persons of title |
13.1 |
| Members of Parliament |
6.4 |
| Naval and military officers |
9.1 |
| Home Civil Service |
1.3 |
| Indian Civil Service |
4.0 |
| Professions excluding law |
4.0 |
| Lawyers |
13.8 |
| Industrialists |
4.4 |
| Merchants |
10.1 |
| Other commerce |
4.7 |
| Annuitants |
6.0 |
| Landowners |
8.8 |
| [No information] |
25.5 |
|
111.2 |
Even when land appears to provide the sole
source of income, the family pedigree may suggest
a commercial origin for much of the fortune in
question, as in the case of W. H. North, later
eleventh Baron North, of Cromwell Road
(family estates worth £18,217 per annum in
1883), who was a great-grandson of Thomas
Coutts, the banker. In the case of the third Baron
Abinger, also of Cromwell Road, and whose
mother lived in Queen's Gate Terrace, the
family fortune appears to have been accumulated
in the West Indies and at the bar. His grandfather,
James Scarlett, had been born in Jamaica, where
the family 'held considerable property and had
long been resident'. At the age of sixteen Scarlett
had been sent to England to complete his education,
and in due course became a very successful
barrister before entering Parliament, where he
served as Attorney-General before being appointed
Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer and raised
to the peerage as Lord Abinger. In 1813 he had
bought a country seat and estate at Abinger in
Surrey, but his grandson, the third Baron, had sold
most of it and invested the proceeds in land in
Inverness-shire; in 1883 the family estates were
worth £5,035 per annum.
The bar was, indeed, a not unusual aid to
wealth. Sir John Rose, a Scot who had emigrated
while still a boy and earned a fortune in the
Canadian courts before entering politics there,
had combined the bar with London banking, and
in 1871, when he was living in Queen's Gate,
described himself as a merchant. More unusual,
perhaps, is the case of the Bethell family, whose
wealth appears to have been made solely in the
professions, Slingsby Bethell of Queen's Gate
Terrace, a barrister and clerk of the House of
Lords, being the grandson of a Bristol physician
and the younger son of Lord Chancellor Westbury,
who in his earlier days had practised at the
bar with conspicuous success. Three consecutive
generations in the professions can, however, be
matched, in the person of Bonamy Dobree of
Queen's Gate Place, banker, by three consecutive
generations in the mercantile world of the City.
Permutations in the sources of wealth of the
householders of this part of South Kensington
are, indeed (as no doubt elsewhere), almost
endless.
On the night of the census, 2-3 April 1871, 62
of the 297 houses so far discussed were not in
substantially normal occupation. In some of these
62 houses the householder and his family, or part
of it, were absent, the servants, or some of them,
being left in charge, while in others a caretaker,
often with his or her family, had been installed in a
newly completed house until a tenant could be
found; and in Queen's Gate Terrace several
adjacent houses were already in use as a hotel,
and there was also a girls' boarding school. These
62 houses have therefore been excluded from the
following calculations.
In the remaining 235 houses, the average
number of inhabitants per house (and so per
household, since no house was subdivided), was
10.9, of whom 6.2 were servants, including
governesses. There was therefore an average of
1.3 servants for each member of the householder's
family and for each visitor resident on the night
of the census.
In the 139 occupied coach-houses in the nine
mews within the area the average size of household
was 4.09 persons. Of the mews residents 197
were described as coachmen, grooms or servants.
If it is assumed that 75 per cent of these 197 were
in the service of the householders of the 235
houses in the streets of the area under consideration,
then the average number of servants
was 1.5 for each person living on the other side
of the green baize door.
The tables on pages 357–64 also show that
only 27 per cent of the 235 households included
relatives of the householder other than his or her
sons and daughters. Indeed, despite their great
size, comparatively few of these houses accommodated
the householder's brothers, sisters,
nephews, nieces, grandchildren or in-laws. The
total number of governesses—forty—was also
comparatively small, owing to the fewness of
young families: the average age of the male
householder was now nearly fifty.
Over 57 per cent of all the residents in the 235
houses were, of course, servants, and those working
in the 49 houses in normal occupation in
Queen's Gate may be cited as examples of this
elaborate domestic hierarchy. In these 49 houses
339 servants attended to the needs, or supposed
needs, of the other 252 residents, and on average
there were 6.9 indoor servants per house. Of the
339 servants, 23 per cent (78) were male, and 77
per cent (261) female. The average age of the 78
menservants was 28 years, but 73 per cent of
them (57) were unmarried, and of the 21 who
were married, only 2 lived under the same roof as
their wives—Henry Spearing, the butler at No. 7,
married to a lady's maid, and a carpenter at No.
61, who with his wife (both described as servants)
provided for the wants of the only other resident
there, a middle-aged clergyman. The average age
of the 261 female servants was 29 years, but over
91 per cent of them (240) were spinsters, the
remainder being windows (8), or married (13). Of
these 13 married women, only the wives of the 2
menservants mentioned above had their husbands
living on the same premises. In Queen's Gate, at
any rate, domestic servants evidently suffered
considerable curtailment of marriage prospects,
and if they did marry, the chances of their being
able to live with their spouses were extremely
small. Even the butlers, who as senior members of
the domestic establishments might be expected
to have received favourable treatment, fared
badly, for of the 29 butlers in the 49 Queen's
Gate houses under consideration, only 14 were
married, and of these 14 only Henry Spearing of
No. 7 was able to live with his wife. And of course
none of the resident married servants of either
sex had any children living in.
The coachmen were, however, in an entirely
different situation. They lived in rooms over the
stables and coach-houses in the mews, and in the
139 such dwellings in the nine mews under
consideration, 86 per cent (120) of the householders
were coachmen: 114 of the 120 were
married, and of these 114 all but four had their
wives with them on the night of the census. Many
of them also, of course, had children as well, and
grooms and servants often lodged with them.
In reviewing the census returns a few households
attract particular attention (remembering,
however, that one night may not be typical). The
two most populous households, at No. 1 Queen's
Gate and No. 4 Cromwell Gardens, each contained
23 persons. At each house that total
included 13 servants, the highest number
represented in the returns, which occurs also at
No. 3 Cromwell Road. At No. 1 Queen's Gate
they were a butler, two footmen, a housekeeper,
two lady's maids, two housemaids, a kitchen maid,
a scullery maid, a schoolroom maid, a nurse and a
nursemaid. Presumably a cook was usually also
resident. The largest family numbered twelve, at
No. 28 Queen's Gate Gardens (parents, nine
children and a nephew). It is remarkable that,
with governesses excluded, only 21 households
had fewer than four servants. At No. 27 Cromwell
Road a window of seventy-six had eleven
servants. At No. 21 Queen's Gate Place a couple
aged thirty and twenty-four, apparently without
children, had eight servants. Comparative youthfulness
was, in fact, no hindrance to the command
of service: in the ten households whose head was
in his or her twenties the average number of
servants was 5.6. In Stanhope Gardens one unmarried
lady of thirty-five had six servants and
nearby an unmarried army officer of twenty-seven
also had six, male and female, to look after him.
In that household the oldest member was the
twenty-nine-year-old butler.

Figure 85:
Nos. 41–45 Jay Mews, stables
The houses in this area were not, of course,
always in continuous occupation by the family.
As a witness in favour of the proposed underground
railway told the committee of the House
of Lords in 1864, some of the inhabitants 'are
independent proprietors who have country houses,
and they come there for the season'. (ref. 367) Many
years later an observer of the obvious wealth of the
area noted: 'The district is not cheerful, however,
after the London season has come to an end.' (ref. 368)
The change of occupational character
In 1880, apart from the South Kensington Hotel,
there were virtually no residential hotels in the
area discussed in this chapter north of Harrington
Road, or if there were they did not announce
themselves in the Post Office Directory. On the
other hand eight residents were of higher rank
in the peerage than a more viscount (four in
Cromwell Road, three in Queen's Gate and one
in Queen's Gate Gardens). By 1890 one or two
hotels were appearing at the bottom end of
Queen's Gate and at the south-west corner of
Stanhope Gardens; also a 'college' and 'apartments'
in Queensberry Place. (ref. 33) But Kipling
could still give the heir of a shipping tycoon and
his aristocratic wife an over-grand house in 'the
Cromwell Road' in 1894. (ref. 369) By 1900 avowed
boarding houses, apartments, hotels and schools
numbered about a dozen (again, exclusive of
Harrington Road), the chief increase being in the
southern part of Queen's Gate, off the three main
landowners' estates. But one hotel appears in both
Queen's Gate Gardens and Cromwell Place on
the Alexander estate, (ref. 33) which seems to have been
starting to licence such uses. (ref. 370) By 1910 a hotel
had appeared at the northern end of Queen's Gate,
but with this exception the area northward of the
Cromwell Road neighbourhood remained (ostensibly
at least) almost wholly private. By 1930 this
had ceased to be so (Elvaston Place, however, not
yet succumbing as Queen's Gate Terrace had).
But the greatest change was the division of most
of the houses used for private residence into
divided occupation and this has, of course,
continued. (ref. 33)
In Queen's Gate Mews a 'motor car house'
was built for Captain G. D. Sampson of Hyde
Park Gate in 1898. (ref. 336) Estate-agents were then
thinking too many stables had been built for the
demand. (ref. 371) Today this seems fortunate, but it has
not been possible to trace chronologically the
conversion of stables to garages. Nor is evidence
forthcoming to plot the change overhead of
residential mews-accommodation from the home
of servants to the 'amusing' address of the smart
and then to the ordinary home of small fairly
well-to-do families.
In common with other parts of more-or-less
central London this area has in recent years
tended to revert to occupation by the comparatively
wealthy: nevertheless the subdivision
of the houses and their miscellaneous use has left
them in appearance, at least, rather déclassé. This
is not quite so true of the important buildings that
remain to be described, which have, however,
more frequently suffered total demolition.