CHAPTER II - Kensington Square and Environs
In 1685 a wood-carver and joiner of St. Martin-in-the-Fields called Thomas Young, who had acquired some
property in Kensington which he wished to improve, ‘did
sett out and appoint a considerable part thereof to be built
into a large Square of large and substantial Houses fit for
ye Habitacion of persons of good Worth and Quality, with
Courts and Yards before and Gardens lying backwards’. (ref. 1)
Thus in 1701 Thomas Young himself summarized the
origins and development of Kensington Square. It had
originally been called King's Square, in honour of the
reigning monarch, James II, and this name persists until
quite late in some documents. The decision to build a
square so far from the centre of London is remarkable and
was presumably Young's own; the half a dozen or so
examples which already existed were all much more
central. He does not seem, however, to have had any difficulty in persuading other builders and developers to join
him in the venture. But finding tenants for the houses in
the early years was to prove rather more difficult, and Kensington Square was probably only saved from failure by
the establishment of the Court at Kensington Palace—an
event quite unforseeable in 1685.
This came too late to save Young, who by then was
enmeshed in financial difficulties which resulted in his
being imprisoned for debt. After the departure of the
Court from Kensington in the early 1750s the square
lapsed into a period of gentle decline. Perhaps partly in
consequence there were no ambitious schemes radically
to renew the fabric and something of the appearance of
the old square survived. This has not been wholly lost even
today. The square's escape from extensive office and commercial use in this century has left it with more of its old
appearance and air of private occupation than other of
London's early squares.
These first paragraphs are chiefly concerned with the
early years of the square and what is known of its builders,
and with the dominating influence in its recent history—the proximity of an expansive department store. This is
followed by accounts of the individuals houses in the
square, and of some neighbouring streets.
The property in Kensington which Thomas Young
wished to improve by laying out a square had been
acquired by him in 1682. It consisted of some fourteen
acres of enclosed ground and a capital messuage or
mansion house behind the south side of Kensington High
Street. (ref. 2) The house was assessed for nine hearths in 1666. (ref. 3)
The extent of Young's estate, in so far as it is known or
can be reasonably conjectured, is shown on figure 1: it
is not known if it had a frontage to the High Street. In
the early seventeenth century it had formed part of the
much larger holding hereabouts of the Muschamp family,
who in 1635 had leased the house and some twelve acres
of land to Sir John Thorowgood, knight, for his own
occupation. In 1655 Thorowgood bought the freehold of
the property for £800, and after his death, in 1675, it
passed to his brother, Robert Thorowgood, a merchant,
from whom it was acquired by Thomas Young in 1682.
The purchase price was £1,550, of which £1,000 was
raised by mortgaging the estate, already encumbered with
an earlier mortgage, back to Thorowgood. The various
mortgage interests were subsequently conveyed to two
lawyers of the Middle Temple, John Lloyd and Joseph
Grymwade, who joined with Young in granting leases and
in other legal transactions connected with the early
development of the square. In 1686 Lloyd and Grymwade
assigned their interests to Francis Butler of St. Bride's in
the City, gentleman, and Francis Brockett of the Middle
Temple, an attorney. According to Young, Butler and
Brockett continued to hold the property in trust for him
even after he had paid off the outstanding mortgages. (ref. 4)
Thorowgood's mansion was presumably demolished by
Young before laying out the square.
Although he is occasionally described as a slater, it was
as a joiner and as a wood-carver in the Grinling Gibbons
tradition that Young was chiefly employed. Of his background relatively little is known, but he was probably the
Thomas Young, son of William Young of Exeter, joiner,
who in December 1662 was apprenticed to Philip Milner,
a member of the Joiners' Company. (ref. 5) After completing his
apprenticeship, Young became a freeman of the Joiners'
Company in 1670. (ref. 6) In 1672 he was one of the wood-carvers
employed on Wren's rebuilding of St. Mary-at-Hill; and
in the mid 1680s he undertook similar work at another
Wren church, St. Mary Magdalene, Old Fish Street. (ref. 7)
Prior to the laying out of Kensington Square Young
is not known to have engaged in speculative building on
his own account, although he undertook work for others
involved in the development of Soho. He was one of the
workmen employed by the speculative builder Richard
Frith and his partner, the timber merchant Cadogan
Thomas, to finish the Duke of Monmouth's house in Soho
Square in 1681–2. Three years later Young worked (as a
slater) on the finishing of Sir Samuel Grimston's new
house in Soho Square, and in Gerrard Street he and
another building tradesman were granted the lease of a
house in partial payment for work undertaken for the
prominent late-seventeenth-century speculator Nicholas
Barbon. (ref. 8)
Outside London, he is known to have worked as a carver
at some important country houses—Burghley (1682–7),
Chatsworth (1688–91), Sudbury Hall (1691) and Kiveton.
At Burghley his period of employment overlapped that of
Gibbons himself, but it was Young and a fellow woodcarver, Jonathan Maine, who received the largest payments. Thence he moved to Chatsworth, where he led a
team of four carvers, three of them from London and one
local man. (ref. 9)
Young, who wanted the square to be ‘completed and
finished with all convenient expedience’, recognized that
he could not ‘carry on so great an undertaking by himself’. (ref. 1)
He therefore leased or sold most of the sites there for
development by others. More than twenty different
builders and building tradesment took sites, of whom
perhaps a dozen also worked, liked Young, under Wren or
in Soho. The former included the bricklayers Stephen
Emmett and Henry Webb, the carpenter John Hayward,
the joiner Henry Lobb, the plasterer Henry Margetts, the
locksmith William Partidge, and the masons Nicholas and
John Young (who are not known to have been related to
Thomas). Henry Lobb, who built a house on the north
side of the square and with his brother William, another
joiner, purchased a large site on the west side (fig. 1), was
also employed at Chatsworth, where a third brother, Joel,
was one of Thomas Young's team of wood-carvers. (ref. 10)
Another builder in the square to follow the Chatsworth
trail was Henry Margetts, the lessee of No. 15. In London
Margetts worked at both the Chelsea Hospital and Kensington Place. (ref. 11) At Chatsworth he was chief Plasterer, but
the only comment on him there that has come down to
us is a remark by the Duke of Devonshire's steward that
‘Mr. Margaretts I beleeve is but poore tho very rude to
his Grace’. (ref. 12) Most of the builders who took sites in the
square operated under leases granted by Young which
were generally for a term of fifty-one years from Midsummer 1685.
House-Building was in progress by the summer of that
year, Young giving the lead by undertaking six houses
himself. These included the largest and probably the
earliest house in the square on the site of the present
No. 13. By about 1690 the north, east and south sides were
largely completed. The south side did not then included
Nos. 11 and 12, which were added about 1700 and
although numbered in the square and perhaps its best-known houses are physically just outside it. The north side
still lacked Nos. 36 and 37, the two westernmost houses,
No. 37 being built soon afterwards but No. 36 not until
c. 1721–2. On the west side only one house (No. 24) had
been completed by 1690. The rest of this side was developed rather slowly and the last houses to be built there
(Nos. 34 and 35) were not erected until 1736–7. (An
account of the development of the west side will be found
on page 29.) Early in 1691 the Middlesex Justices found
the north, south and east sides ‘fit to be paved with stone
from the place designed for a freestone pavement before
the several and respective houses there, to the rails [enclosing the central garden] in the said square’. They ordered
the work to be carried out by Midsummer 1691, but it
was delayed by difficulties in apportioning the charge
among the inhabitants and owners of the adjoining
houses. (ref. 13)
As far as is known there are no early views of the square.
The bird's-eye view which Joshua Rhodes included in his
plans and elevations of Kensington Palace in 1762–4 is
merely conventional in its depiction of the houses, and the
picture painted on a fan, reproduced by Beresford
Chancellor in his Squares of London and said to be of Kensington Square, is in fact a view of the Orange Grove in
Bath. In the absence of any illustration it is not easy to
imagine how the square looked in its early days, but even
on those sides which were complete it was low-built and
irregular, the houses varying considerably in width and
most of them probably rising (as No. 45 still does) no
higher than two storeys. In 1705, when the square was
still near the apex of its fashionableness, John Bowack
called it the most beautiful part of Kensington, ‘which for
Beauty of Building and Worthy Inhabitants exceeds
several Squares in London’. (ref. 14) In 1729 The Foreigner's Guide spoke of its ‘pretty Houses’. (ref. 15)
The centre of the square was laid out as ‘a Garden Plot’
enclosed within rails, the lessees of the houses being expected to contribute to the cost of making the garden and
erecting the rails. (ref. 16) The earliest known plan of the square,
in 1717, shows the garden simply laid to lawn edged round
with single rows of trees, (ref. 17) a layout which persisted until
at least the second half of the eighteenth century (Plate 1).
Rhodes's view, rightly or wrongly, also shows trees planted
along the edges of the pavement and extending up the east
side of Young Street. The square is notable for the deep
‘Courts and Yards’ Mentioned by Young in front of the
houses on its north and south sides. Some of these are
still separated by shoulder-high walls of distinctive form
which also occur on the later west side and may formerly
have been a characteristic of the square.
Some stabling for the houses was provided in a separatemews laid out by Young at the eastern end of the way
or passage leading out of the south-east corner of the
square (fig. 1). Latterly called Kensington Square Mews,
this survived until the early 1870s. Its site is now covered
by the southern end of Kensington Court.
At least one house in the square was inhabited by 1687,
the occupant being a Nicholas Bagnall, esquire. (ref. 18) By 1690
there were about a dozen inhabitants, but most of the
thirty or so houses were still unoccupied. The fillip given
to the square by the arrival of the Court at Kensington
is reflected in a sudden surge in the number of residents
after 1690, so that by 1696 all but one of the houses then
completed were in occupation. (ref. 18) The impact of the Court
on the character of the occupation of the square is discussed in Chapter I.
In order to encourage ‘persons of quality and other good
and responsible tenants to rent and inhabit’ the houses
in the square before proximity to the Court provided its
own inducement, Young spent upwards of £650 in laying
out a ‘large and commodious bowling green’ at South End
(fig. 1), and in erecting ‘an House of Entertainment (for
Eating and Drinking) to belong thereto’. The bowling
green house, as it was known, was a substantial brick building of three storeys with four rooms per floor, ‘richly
wainscotted and adorned and painted ’. Adjacent, Young
laid out a ‘Spring Garden’, and was perhaps inspired partly by the Spring Garden and bowling green at Charing
Cross. Young proudly described the bowling green as having been brought by him ‘to a great finish and perfection’,
with ‘the levell, banks and green swarded in good order’
and the whole planted around with ‘a quick (and constantly green) hedge’. He kept the management of this
amenity in his own hands and lived in the bowling green
house with his family. Young claimed for the bowling
green that ‘not only was it a great convenience to the inhabitants of the square but much encouraged and forwarded
the well letting of the same’, and that ‘from the great resort
of nobility and gentry and other persons of good account
to the green’ he and his family enjoyed a very considerable
trade, ‘to the comfortable support and maintainance of
[himself], his wife and family’. (ref. 1)

Figure 1:
Kensington Square district. Plan based on the Ordnance Survey of 1867–72 showing the boundary
of Thomas Young's estate where known certainly (solid line) or conjecturally (broken line). The stippling
indicates the properties acquired by Thomas Sutton. The letters H and L mark the plots sold by Young
in 1686 to Ralph Hutchinson and to William and Henry Lobb respectively
A completely opposing view was taken by one of
Young's mortagees who saw the bowling green rather as
‘an encumbrance and charge’ and asserted that Young, far
from gaining any support from it, found it ‘the occasion
of his running into debt not having a trade answerable to
the expense there fore’. (ref. 1)
The mortagee just referred to—probably the most
important of all Young's financial backers—was Thomas
Sutton, an India-grown-seller of Buckingham Street,
Strand, with two shops in the New Exchange. (ref. 19) In 1702
he was the defendant in a Chancery suit brought by
Young, whose bill of complaint, together with Sutton's
answer, is an important, if confusing and fragmentary,
source for the early history of the square.
According to Young's testimony he had spent £7,000
‘at the least’ on laying out his land. Some of this money
he raised by outright sales of freeholds and some by mortgages to a number of creditors. (Those who lent him
money by mortgage or otherwise included Matthew Child,
the brewer, brickmaker and landowner at Earl's Court.) (ref. 1)
In 1686 Young sold most of the west side of the square
before any development had taken place there (see page
29) and in the same year he sold the freehold of four houses
in the square (Nos. 4, 6, 19 and 45) and a couple in Young
Street to Francis Butler for £300. (ref. 20) In the following year
he raised a further £700 by selling the freehold of eight
more houses in the square to Thomas Sutton (Nos. 5, 14–15, 21–23 and 43–44). In the same year 1687 Young borrowed money from Sutton to continue building, which was
secured on a mortgage of three other houses in the square
(Nos. 16, 17 and 20) and some undeveloped areas, usually
referred as the waste, in its south-east and south-west corners. But within six months of obtaining this mortgage
Young was arrested for debt and carried off to the King's
Bench Prison. His explanation of his difficulties was the
great loss he had sustained by the ‘divers persons who were
indebted to him failing in the world’ and his having
‘exhausted and spent his stock in purchasing and building
upon the estate and other improvements’. (ref. 1)
While in prison he was visited by Sutton who, ‘pretending great love and kindness’ to Young, persuaded him to
assign to Sutton the equity of redemption in the mortgage, to protect his property from his creditors, who would
otherwise have seized it and left him ‘to perish in prison’
and his family to ‘come to ruin’. If Young is to be believed
it was this argument that induced him to execute an assignment to Sutton in February 1688. This made over to him
the equity of redemption (in effect the freehold) of those
parts of the square which he already held under mortgage
and also of the bowling green, the bowling green house
and the ‘Spring Garden’, which Young had already mortgaged elsewhere. The nominal purchase price was £400,
which Sutton was, according to Young, to dispense on
finishing some of the houses. Young afterwards claimed,
in Chancery, that his assignment, though formally
absolute, was in fact subject to an undertaking by Sutton
to return his property to him on the repayment of his borrowings. Not long after this Young must, temporarily at
least, have been set at liberty, for between 1688 and 1691
he was employed at Chatsworth. But in November 1691
he was again confined, (ref. 21) this time ‘ to a close prisson in
ye prison of ye Fleet’, where he remained for most of the
1690s, (ref. 22) ignorant of and debarred from participation in
Sutton's dealings with the property. (One expedient
Young tried to use in 1698 was a loan to repay Sutton
on the security of his whole estate from Hugh Chamberlen's ‘land Bank’, but Sutton, advised by the impolite
plasterer Henry Margetts that the land bank would ‘not
do’, refused to co-operate.) Eventually in 1701 Young
brought his complaint in Chancery against Sutton for
witholding his property from him. (ref. 1)
An exacerbation of Sutton's offences, in Young's eyes,
was his treatment of the bowling green. This Sutton had
caused to be ‘digged quite upp’ (having first removed the
turf), and converted into what Young described as a ‘barren and unprofitable garden’. But according to Sutton it
was the bowling green itself which had been unprofitable.
He had allowed Young's wife and children to live on rent
free in the house there while Young was in prison and
to make what money they could from it, ‘yet the trade
was so small they could not maintain themselves thereby’.
As for taking away the turf, he believed ‘the green was
never turfed otherwise than as it naturally grew’. After
the departure of Young's family, Sutton had let the bowling green, the house and the ‘Spring Garden’ to ‘one Ful-wood’, but notwithstanding his and Sutton's endeavours
‘to encourage and bring trade’ Fulwood had been forced
to quit, claiming that the ‘rent was great and the resort
to the green so small’. After this Sutton had decided that
to persevere with the bowling green would be a ‘great
burden’ to the owner, so had converted it into an orchard,
planting fruit trees there and replacing Young's hedge with
a brick wall. It was not, he said, altered ‘out of desire to
ruin or destroy it but to make all the improvement possible
to the estate’. (ref. 1)
Although no record of a final judgment in Young's
Chancery suit has been traced, it must be presumed to
have failed in so far as Young seems never to have
recovered any of the assigned properties. Thereafter he
virtually disappears from view and is last heard of living in St. James's in 1721. He had a son, Peter, also of St.
James's, who was a surveyor. (ref. 23)
Sutton, on the other hand, who by this time was living
in the square (at the former No. 22), (ref. 18) continued in possession of the bowling green, the bowling green house, and
the ‘Spring Garden’. He still had in hand five of the eight
houses in the square (including his own residence) which
he had bought from Young in 1687, the others having been
sold. Two of the five, Nos. 14 and 15, he retained, and
together with the former bowling green and ‘Spring
Garden’ they were to remain in the ownership of his heirs
until well into the eighteenth century. (ref. 24)
After selling his own dwelling house in the square in
1705, Sutton moved to a house at South End. (ref. 25) This was
probably the former bowling green house, which Young
thought Sutton would have difficulty in letting. No. person
of ‘quality or worth’ would live there, he predicted, on
account of its ‘Standing backwards behind the gardens and
coachhouses and stables belonging to the square’, and it
was ‘much too big for any gardener or other person of
mean calling or circumstance to take’. (ref. 1) After Sutton's
death (some time between 1724 and 1743 (fn. a) ) his property
in and around the square descended to his son, Thomas
Sutton junior, a barrister. He succeeded his father in the
house at South End, but later occupied No. 14 Kensington
Square until his death in 1759; the latter's widow lived
at No. 15 from c. 1760 until 1765. (ref. 27)
Throughout the eighteenth century the site of the
former bowling green and ‘Spring Garden’ was let by Sutton and his heirs to a succession of gardeners, and apart
from a small piece next to South End Row, which was
sold in 1794 (see pages 136–7), the ground was still being
cultivated as a market garden in the 1840s. (ref. 28) Bisected in
1865–6 by the uncovered tracks of the Metropolitan Railway, the site is now occupied by part of the garden and
some of the buildings of the Convent of the Assumption
in Kensington Square, and by the London Tara Hotel
(figs. 1 and 2).
With the building of Nos. 34 and 35 in 1736–7 the
square finally stood complete. The process of renewal was
already beginning, however, and although it has never
been very radical the height of the houses has generally
been raised by at least a storey. By the 1780s some of the
original brick fronts had disappeared under a skin of
stucco. Only one house (No. 9) is known to have been
rebuilt from the ground before 1800. This was followed
by the replacement of Nos. 41 and 42 in 1804–5, and by
the reconstruction of No. 7 in 1808–9. Another four
houses (Nos. 4, 13, 23 and 27) had been wholly rebuilt
by the mid 1850s. The last thirty years of the nineteenth
century, a time when the historic character of the square
was becoming appreciated, was also, ironically, the period
when most rebuilding took place. Ten old houses were
demolished (two of them for the chapel of the Convent
of the Assumption) and another two were refaced. At four
of these sites new ‘Queen Anne’ replaced the old fronts.
After the withdrawal of the Court from Kensington the
square had become something of a backwater, most of the
houses remaining in respectable private occupation but
others passing into use for genteel schools and academies.
Probably the earliest of these was estabished in the 1750s
(at No. 30) and by the early 1830s there were no fewer
than eight academies in the square, seven of them catering
for boarders. (ref. 29) The Kensington Proprietary Grammar
School for boys founded in 1831 (and its successor) was
well patronized but succumbed to the dominance of the
public school and the particular rivalry of St. Paul's at
Hammersmith, and closed in 1896 (see page 33). The census of 1861 confirms this picture of a square largely in
sober private occupation but with enough other uses to
keep in unsmart. Twenty years later the picture is not very
different, but with wealth and ‘position’ perhaps a little
better represented.
In this century the charm of the square and the continuance there of numerous individual freehold units brought
in owner-occupiers increasingly concerned for its survival—a concern that has not gone unexercised. This is because
the issue which has dominated the history of Kensington
Square after 1890 has been the growth of John Barker and
Company from a handy shop in Kensington High Street
into a gigantic concern which has threatened not just to
overshadow the square but also, at times, to swallow parts
of it up entirely.
By Barkers' own account the company first expanded
into the square in 1890, ‘when our horses and vehicles were
stabled in the yards forming part of Nos. 2 to 6, Kensington Square, on the East side. At that time and until after
the 1914–1918 War, the Company's trade vehicles stood
around the Square Garden, which was open and used by
our staff, many of whom lived in certain houses of the
Square.’ (ref. 30) By 1914 houses on all four sides had been in
temporary or premanent use by Barkers or their rivals
Derry and Toms. Most were used for business purposes,
though there were some staff hostels. (ref. 31)
Any murmurings among private residents at this stage
failed to make themselves heard. But after Barkers took
over Derry and Toms in 1920 and embarked on a concerted expansion, trouble erupted. The immediate casus
belli was on the north side where the company tried to
buy Nos. 43–45, with No. 16 Young Street, in order to
build a loading bay on the sites. A powerful protest, orchestrated by Bryan Fell of No. 43, secretary of the Kensington Square Garden Committee, was ‘got up’ in The Times
in February 1923. Next year, Barkers agreed to be content
with acquiring No. 16 and part of the gardens and not to
pursue their claim on the houses in the square. For the
time being the loading bay was not constructed. But as
a result of the alarm, many private owners in the square
signed convenants committing themselves and their successors to using their houses for residential purposes only.
Thus, as so often, it was the threat of demolition which
caused loins to be girded and the stirrings of an architectural
re-evaluation to begin. (ref. 32)

Figure 2:
Kensington Square district. Based on the Ordnance Survey of 1952–68
In 1927 a far-reaching arrangement was made whereby
the company undertook to rebuild the whole of Barkers
and of Derry and Toms' main premises with modern
service features behind (see page 93). This must have
seemed by its very scale and appearance of completeness
a guarantee for Kensington Square. But the first portion
to be build, Barkers' service block on the south side of Ball
Street, loomed over the square's north side; and despite
the arrangement the company continued to extend its
holdings in the square to the point where in 1939 it could
claim ownership of some two-thirds of its houses. (ref. 33) Following what the residents viewed as repeated encroachments and provocations, relations between the disputants
were now very sour, and the square's garden was firmly
shut against the company's staff. ‘We in Kensington
Square wage a ceaseless war to protect what is now the
oldest Square in London still predominantly residential
from destruction by commercial interests’, trumpeted
Angus Acworth, occupant of No. 33, honorary secretary
of the Georgian Group, and chief champion of the
residents' interests. (ref. 34)
The climax of hostilities came in 1946–9, when Barkers
pressed persistently for the removal of covenants on
serveral houses in their ownership and returned to their
aim of building a loading dock behind Nos. 42–45 Kensington Square and No. 16 Young Street. The issues
generated prolonged public controversy and private lobbying and became an important test of the new post-war
planning laws. (fn. b) The outcome was a draw. Barkers
obtained their loading dock, but without the thoroughfare
through the ground floor of No. 42 Kensington Square
which they had hoped for, while the planning authorities
confirmed the residential status of the square, where many
houses were listed as of architectural and historical interest. (ref. 36) In the event, therefore, no house in the square was
demolished. Over the years Barkers' drive for expansion.
diminished, allowing a gradual accommodation with the
square's residents. At the time of writing the company still
owns properties and houses some of its staff in the square.
But none of its business activities are carried on there, and
the overwhelming tenor of the square remains, as ever,
domestic.