LXXIII.— MILMAN'S STREET.
When Henry, the second Earl of Lincoln, bought the great house
(Sir Thomas More's), afterwards Beaufort House, he settled the property
on his son-in-law, Sir Arthur Gorges (fn. 1) and his daughter Elizabeth. But
while Lincoln lived in the great house, he had another house built for Gorges
and his wife close by, just north of Lindsey House. This was known as
Gorges House, and is shown by Kip as a typical Elizabethan gabled
mansion. The house seems subsequently to have been a school, which
became famous under the management of Josias Priest, dancing master. It
is called Priest's in Hamilton's map (plate 1). At the end of the 17th century it was bought by Sir William Milman, and in the year 1726 his four
nieces leased the property for building "a new row of buildings intended
to be called Milman's Row." (fn. 2) These buildings are upon the east side
of Milman's Street, and at the north end there used to be a tablet
bearing the inscription "Millman Row 1726." They have been
much modernised, but the backs of Nos. 21 to 33 retain their old brickwork and no doubt much of the original structure remains.
At the south end of the street on the east side are three brick cottages
of two storeys with sash windows in openings intended for casements, and
dormer windows in the tiled roof. These cottages appear to date from
the middle of the 17th century, and are shown on Hamilton's map, where
Milman's Street is a narrow lane inscribed "Way to Little Chelsea." They
are now numbered 55, 57 and 59.
Footnotes
| 1 |
There is an interesting brass with a group of Sir Arthur Gorges' family in the
old church. |
| 2 |
The above particulars are taken from the very detailed account given by Mr. Randall
Davies (Chelsea Old Church, pp. 131–5). |