The Effect of the Underground
Railways
Virtually the only part of the estate to undergo major
changes in the period between 1850 and Freake's death in
1884 where he was not involved was in Pelham Street and
the adjoining frontage of what was then Fulham Road but
is now the western end of Brompton Road. Here the
authorisation of the construction of the Metropolitan and
Metropolitan District Railways by Acts of Parliament in
1864 led to the sale of some plots of land to the railway
companies (see fig. 23) and the subsequent demolition of
several houses.
Initially the building of the railways and their joint
station at South Kensington affected the neighbouring
Alexander estate more than the Smith's Charity estate (see
page 79) and in Pelham Street only a few houses at the
western end had to be pulled down to make way for the
station (Plate 48a). In 1871, however, the remaining houses
on the north side of the street to the west of the short
stretch of roadway leading to Thurloe Square were demolished
so that the station could be enlarged to accommodate
separate District platforms. This was in part the result
of a quarrel between the two companies which also led to
the District acquiring the surviving terrace at Nos. 51–61
(odd) Pelham Street in order to construct its branch line to
the station but, in the event, these houses did not have to
be demolished. (ref. 236)
On the frontage to Fulham Road the last house in
Onslow Terrace, with James Bonnin's former cottage and
workshops behind, had to be demolished in c. 1866 for the
construction of the District railway. They were eventually
replaced in 1879–80 by a riding school which was later
converted into a garage and two houses and shops now
numbered 266 and 268 Brompton Road, the upper
storeys of which are faced with red brick and cement
dressings in a coarse Italianate style. They were built by
Henry R. Wagner of Britannia Street, King's Cross, to the
designs of John Mechelen Rogers, architect. (ref. 237)
The construction of the deep-level Great Northern,
Piccadilly and Brompton Railway (now the Piccadilly
Line), which was begun in 1902, produced yet another
extension to South Kensington Station on the frontage to
Pelham Street. Opened in January 1907, this part of the
station was designed by Leslie W . Green and has retained
the original façade of ox-blood-red glazed faience (Plate
48b) which he used at several tube stations between 1903
and 1907. (ref. 238) A range of two-storey shops, called Station
Buildings, was erected shortly afterwards on the frontage
to Pelham Street to the east of the station, but was
demolished in 1973. (ref. 239) At the present No. 49 Pelham
Street, on the east corner of the entrance to Thurloe
Square, an electricity sub-station was built in 1904 to serve
the needs of the railway. Green designed an elaborate
Baroque building for the site with four storeys of flats
above the sub-station, but in the event only the ground
storey was completed. Two more floors, in red brick and
stone with bow windows to Pelham Street, were added in
the early 1920's to the designs of Stanley A. Heaps,
architect to the Underground Electric Railways Company,
to provide a dining club for the company. (ref. 240)
References
| 236. |
M.D.R. 1870/5/172; 1871/15/621: Charles E. Lee, The
Metropolitan District Railway, 1956, p. 5: G.L.R.O., MDR
1 1, Aug. 1867; MDR 1/2, March 1871. |
| 237. |
M.D.R. 1870/13/920: M.B.W., case 26010: D.S.R. 1879
80–2. |
| 238. |
Alan A. Jackson and Desmond F. Croome, Rails Through the
Clay, 1962, pp. 41–2, 70–3, 82, 94, 108, 114: Charles E.
Lee, The Piccadilly Line, 1973, pp. 9–16. |
| 239. |
Stroud, The South Kensington Estate of Henry Smith's Chanty,
p. 62. |
| 240. |
B.A. 24385: P.O.D. |