Frognal, NW3

Road in/near Hampstead, existing between 1878 and now.

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FEBRUARY
27
2015
A road called Frognal runs from Church Row in Hampstead downhill to Finchley Road and follows the course of a stream which goes on to form the River Westbourne.

The origin of the name of Frognal, first recorded in the early 15th century, is not known. The 'house called Frognal', lay on the west side of the road, probably on the site later occupied by Frognal House. The locality is of some importance as it contained the Hampstead Estate manor-house where the Courts Leet were held.

By the 17th century there were several cottages and houses at Frognal; by then the name probably indicated the road leading from the church and manor farm northward to the heath, between the demesne (land that the lord of a manor, in feudal times, kept for himself rather than letting out) on the west and Hampstead town on the east.

The Hampstead demesne lands at Frognal occupied from four to five hundred acres of the best land stretching from Child's Hill to Belsize. The old manor-house which stood at the north-east corner of West End Lane, was a long, low farmhouse building which contained a big hall. Mr Pool, a lessee, pulled it down and built a brick house on the site, and, later, built a small house on the south side of the lane, where he went to live himself. The Courts followed him, and were held there.

There were two houses or cottages there by the beginning of the 18th century, held by brothers, John and Thomas Smith. Thomas, a bricklayer, had divided his into two.

Set back from the road in 1½ acres, adjoining the churchyard, was Frognal Hall, which probably existed by 1646 and can be identified with the attorney-general's house visited by Pepys in 1668. It may have been rebuilt by the architect Isaac Ware, who owned it from 1759 to 1765. The southernmost house was that later called Priory Lodge, opposite Frognal Lane, which has been identified with the 'small house just beyond the church', alluded to by Samuel Johnson, where his wife lodged for the country air according to Boswell and where Johnson wrote most of the Vanity of Human Wishes, published in 1749.


Frognal, NW3

In 1792 Frognal was praised for its 'salubrity of air and soil, in the neighbourhood of pleasure and business'. As early as 1762 some 43 acres of demesne were leased to copyhold tenants who used them as pleasure grounds.

In 1811 Frognal was described as a a 'hamlet of handsome residences', surrounded by groves and gardens 'of an extent begrudged by builders in these modern days'. In 1824 arguments against the proposed new road made particular reference to the houses occupied by Carr, Blunt, Innes (sic), and Thompson, the few gentlemen's houses valued for their privacy and the views which they or their grounds commanded.

When the Finchley Road was built through the middle of the demesne between 1826 and 1835, it destroyed the exclusivity and converted the farmland into ripe building land, which the lord of the manor, Sir Thomas Maryon Wilson, was eager to exploit. He was thwarted by the will of his father, Sir Thomas (d. 1821), which left him unable to grant building leases, and by local defenders of the heath who opposed his private bills. The demesne became available only after his death in 1869, when building was further delayed, mainly because the new lord Sir John (d. 1876) and his son Spencer needed to resolve their differences in order to break the terms of the entail. In 1873 they agreed to divide the estate, allocating to Spencer frontages along Finchley Road, and on two proposed new roads, Priory Road and Fitzjohn's Avenue, on all of which it was planned to build, and land in the north. Apart from Spencer, whose grandiose plans ultimately prevailed in Fitzjohn's Avenue, the main influence in shaping the estate was F. J. Clark, the land agent who advised the Maryon Wilsons to build the main roads and sewers themselves and to release the land for building in an orderly manner.

Some of the earliest building on the demesne estate was along Finchley Road. To the south, building was already completed on the St. John's Wood estate up to the boundary with Spencer Maryon Wilson's estate. Much of the demesne west of Finchley Road was occupied by railways, with a station called Finchley Road opened on each of the three lines, in 1860, 1869, and 1879, respectively. In 1872 Holy Trinity church was built on the east side of Finchley Road on a site given by Sir John Maryon Wilson and six cottages were built in 1873 on the Finchley Road brickfield, which had been leased to John Culverhouse in 1871. Holy Trinity Vicarage was built in 1877 and a skating rink in 1880, and 29 houses and at least five shops were built in Finchley Road from Swiss Cottage northward in the early 1880s and another 19 houses at the end of the decade. In 1891 another five shops were built and five houses altered into shops; the Midland Railway built six coal offices.

The old road, Frognal, had been extended southward beyond Arkwright Road by 1878 and reached Finchley Road soon afterwards.

In 1878 Frognal was described as a beautiful suburban village, full of gentlemen's seats. In 1903 it still had an air of affluence but was overlooked by 'many windowed, scarlet-faced mansions' and had lost its 'aimless paths and trees'. Building had covered most of the frontage to the road, old as well as new, and was encroaching on the large private gardens.

Frognal has a diverse architecture, with many architecturally notable buildings. The central area, lacking large council estates, has undergone less change than some other parts of Hampstead. University College School, an independent day school founded in 1830, relocated to Frognal (the road) in 1907. Frognall Grove, Grade II listed, (1871–72) was large house inherited by the architect George Edmund Street, who made additions to it. It was later subdivided into four semi-detached houses.

Notable houses of Frognal


Branch Hill Lodge was left by Clarke in 1764 to his patron Thomas Parker, earl of Macclesfield (d. 1795), who leased it to Thomas Walker, Master in Chancery, and then to Lord Loughborough, who lived there before he moved to Belsize in 1792. Stephen Guyon (d. 1779), a merchant, lived in Frognal Hall, which by 1791 was the home of Sir Richard Pepper Arden (1745-1804), Master of the Rolls, later Lord Alvanley and Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. He was leased 6 acres of adjacent demesne land, part of which he later bought and all of which was occupied by his widow for some years. In 1799 the earl of Macclesfield's son sold Branch Hill Lodge to a wealthy merchant, Thomas Neave, who became a baronet in 1814. Neave enlarged the house, which he filled with stained glass from convents plundered during the French Revolution in addition to the glass taken from the Chicken House. To his 4 acres of copyhold land Neave added 9 acres of demesne freehold, which he purchased in 1807 and 1815; he was leased another 21½ acres of demesne from 1808. He sold Branch Hill Lodge, which later briefly housed Lord Byron's widow.

Bay Tree Cottage On Frognal's west side, north of the demesne houses, Bay Tree Cottage existed by 1841.

Frognal Grove Many important lawyers lived in late 18th-century Frognal. From 1772 until 1794 or later Frognal Grove was the home of Edward Montagu, master in Chancery, and from c. 1810 to 1813 of Richard Richards, chief justice of Chester.

Frognal Close John Thompson, an auctioneer who owner Manor Cottage separated 4 acres from it and built a new house by 1818, called by 1834 the Priory or Frognal Priory. He had added a lodge by 1820. The house, on an elevated site with extensive views, had Gothic crenellations, Renaissance windows, Dutch gables, turrets, and a cupola. It was filled with furniture claimed by Thompson to have belonged to Cardinal Wolsey and Elizabeth I and drew many visitors. Thompson was still the occupier in 1840 but by 1851 the house had passed, under his will, to Barnard Gregory (1796-1852), editor of the Satirist, whose title was successfully disputed by Thompson's relations, the McCullochs. Frognal Priory, 'very far in ruin' in 1869, and let to John Culverhouse in 1871, was demolished in 1876. Another Gothic house called Frognal Priory, designed by Richard Norman Shaw for Edwin Tate was built in 1881-2. The break-up of Thompson's Priory estate opened up the area south of Frognal Lane to development. Frognal Priory was replaced in 1937 by Frognal Close, six large semi-detached houses but in a modern style by E. L. Freud, Sigmund's son.

Frognal Gardens Alexander Gray bought the Old Mansion on the east side of old Frognal c. 1889, laid out an L-shaped road, Frognal Gardens, through the grounds, and commissioned James Neale, a former pupil of Street. He added a wing to the old house, and designed no. 100 Frognal and five houses in Frognal Gardens, built by the local firm Allison & Foskett from 1890 to 1896. They included no. 18 (Frognal End), built in 1892 for the novelist and antiquary Sir Walter Besant (1836-1901). Two houses were added in the rear in 1907.

Frognal Park John Metcalf, who bought no. 23 in 1804, acquired some 27 acres of demesne land, on which by 1806 he built a 'new white house', later called Frognal Park, set well back from Frognal Lane, north-west of the other houses. Frognal Park, in parkland and possibly the largest of the Frognal houses, passed in 1809 to Joseph Blunt, a solicitor, and between 1826 and 1831 to John F. Menet, whose widow Louisa subleased the estate in 1849 to Henry Hucks Gibbs, a merchant. Frognal Park was leased from 1856 to after 1896 to James Anderson, a shipowner, who by 1861 had rebuilt it after a fire.

Manor Cottage Between 1810 and 1814 a timber cottage, later called Manor Cottage, was built on the south side of Frognal Lane, east of Manor Lodge. It was mostly occupied by undertenants of the demesne farm, including a newsman of Tottenham Court Road in 1817, a New Bond Street hatter in 1851 and the manorial bailiff in 1872-3. In 1815 Manor Lodge was occupied by John Thompson (d. 1843), a retired auctioneer, called Memory Thompson for his phenomenal knowledge of London. In 1817 he relinquished the house and about 4 acres of the 8 acres of demesne leased to him, which were leased, together with the demesne farmland, to William Baker in 1819 and Robert Stone, a Marylebone stablekeeper, in 1834. The house was sublet and from 1843 to 1871 was occupied by George Chater, a wholesale stationer, who obtained a direct lease in 1848 and extended the house in 1849.

Manor Lodge Damed Peggy Ashcroft, the actress, had in 1987 lived at Manor Lodge in Frognal Lane from the 1950s.

Montagu Grove was enlarged in the 1860s by the architect G. E. Street, whose family had acquired it through marriage.

Oak Hill Park Estate A builder, Thomas Clowser built 10 houses in the 1870s in what he called Oak Hill Park estate after the new road running from Frognal to Oak Hill House and Lodge. Florence Nightingale was a frequent visitor to Oak Hill Park, where Manley Hopkins, an authority on maritime law, lived in the 1850s with his family, including Gerard, the future poet.

Oak Hill Lodge/House Thomas Neave sold Branch Hill Lodge and built two houses to the west on former demesne land, Oak Hill Lodge, where he was living by 1840, and Oak Hill House. George Smith (1824- 1901), founder of the Dictionary of National Biography, lived from 1863 to 1872 in Oak Hill Lodge, where he entertained leading writers and artists.

Priory Lodge Between 1819 and 1844 John Hodgson considerably enlarged Priory Lodge with a baywindowed extension.

Sandfield Lodge Thomas Neave moved to his family seat at Dagnam Park, Romford, taking his glass collection with him, and the Frognal estate passed to his third son Sheffield Neave, a director of the Bank of England, possibly as part of Sheffield's marriage settlement in 1851. By 1850, Sheffield was associated with a local builder, Thomas Clowser, in building two houses in Branch Hill field, Sandfield Lodge and another large house on the borders of the Neave estate, near the Grange, which existed by 1870.

The Grange A cottage called the Salt Box was built on demesne land on the edge of the heath north of Branch Hill Lodge between 1789 and 1808 and was replaced by a house called the Grange probably by 1834. The actor/manager Herbert Beerbohm Tree (1852-1917) later lived at the Grange which he left in 1891 because of the difficulties of travel to 'such a remote country spot'.

University College School In 1906-7 Arnold Mitchell designed University College school, 'an impressive group of Edwardian baroque buildings' just south of Priory Lodge.

2-16 At the Finchley Road end of Frognal nos. 2-16, 'huge but coarse Queen Anne pairs' were built in 1889-91 and most of the 25 houses and four blocks of flats built in Frognal between 1891 and 1896 were by E. H. & H. T. Cave.

10 Hugh Gaitskell (1906-63) lived at no. 10 Frognal in the 1940s and as Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1950.

18 Frognal End was built in 1892 for the novelist and antiquary Sir Walter Besant (1836-1901). Two houses were added in the rear in 1907.

19-21 A single house covering two addresses was built in the grounds of Frognal Manor House. Thomas Pool occupied the western house and at great expense had completed it by 1800 when he sold it to George Stacey, a Holborn chemist, who then obtained a direct lease from the lord. William Carr, a solicitor to the Excise, replaced George Stacey at nos. 19 and 21 Frognal Lane in 1807, obtained a direct lease in 1812, and lived there until 1829 or later. Carr, with his large and sociable family, entertained Joanna Baillie and Maria Edgeworth. The latter often stayed with the family several times between 1819 and 1822, in a 'delightful airy bedchamber' with a bow window. From 1833 to 1841 the house was occupied by James Gordon Murdoch. In 1841 the house, with 6 acres of grounds, was leased to William James Ferguson, who assigned the lease in 1845 to Robert Prance (d. 1869), a stockbroker and magistrate. By the 1890s, 19-21 Frognal was called Maryon Hall, was the home of Reginald Prance, a stockbroker, from 1871 until 1894, when he moved to the Ferns. In 1896 Francis Tasker of Bedford Row converted Maryon Hall into two dwellings, with separate doorways.

20 Sir Bernard Spilsbury (1877-1947), the pathologist, died here.

Frognal Manor House In 1674 the manor house was leased to a Londoner, Benoni Honywood, who occupied it for only six weeks a year, subletting the land and part of the house. From 1757 and probably earlier the manor house was divided and although one half was used as a farmhouse, the other may always have been a dwelling house detached from the farmland. By 1774 the eastern part, leased to John Foster, had been made by him into two distinct houses, each with its own stabling. Foster lived in one until 1783, when the two were converted into a single house, occupied from 1785 until 1803 by the Revd. Charles Grant (d. 1811), the curate, and, after the manorial court met there in 1802, was called the Manor House. In 1785 the western part of the very dilapidated manor house was leased to Thomas Pool on condition that he carried out considerable repairs. Pool probably began work on the eastern end, apparently preserving the carcase of the old building; he borrowed £300 from the lord of the manor, which perhaps led to an inscription on a datestone, 'erected by Sir T. S. Wilson by. 1785'.

23 One of the houses built in the grounds of Frognal Manor House by 1797. It was occupied from 1798 by John Ogilvie, an army agent who spent heavily on completing the building, which he leased directly from 1801 until his bankruptcy in 1804. John Metcalf subleased no. 23 in 1805 to Jeremy Bentham's brother Sir Samuel (1757-1831), naval architect and engineer, who had superintended shipbuilding in Russia, where he had been made a general. He obtained a direct lease in 1813 but left England again in 1814; the house was empty in 1820. In the mid 1820s it was occupied by John Innos and during the 1830s by Miss Anne Hetherington. It was leased to Henry B. Fearon, a wine merchant and one of the founders of London University, in 1841 and occupied throughout the 1850s and most of the 1860s by his widow. The Ferns, was leased from 1868 to William Dunlop Anderson, a colonial broker, who made alterations in 1883 and whose widow obtained the freehold in 1889.

37 Dennis Brain (1921-57), the horn player, lived here.

39 Tile-hung in the style of a Surrey Weald cottage with a studio across the top, designed in 1885 by Norman Shaw for Kate Greenaway (1846-1901), the illustrator, who died there.

40 After living at 19 Frognal, Thomas Pool moved to 'another messuage opposite' on which he spent money between 1798 and 1800 and which was later called Manor Lodge after the manorial courts held there. In 1810 Pool was leased the house with its surrounding 5 acres and outbuildings on the southern side of Frognal Lane, formerly occupied by farm buildings only.

42 Basil Champneys (1842-1935) built himself a house on the site of farm buildings on the Priory estate in 1881. A red-brick four-square house, 'very snug and solid', it was called Manor Farm and, from 1894, Hall Oak and was occupied by the architect until his death.

49 In 1895 the architect Sir Reginald Blomfield (1856-1942) built no. 49, occupied by William Morris's typographer, Thomas Cobden Sanderson (1840-1922), south of the junction with Frognal Lane.

51 In 1895 Sir Reginald Blomfield built no. 51 Frognal for himself.

59 On the northern side of Frognal Lane the Manor House was occupied from 1804 to 1817 by Thomas Norton Longman (1771-1842), the publisher. The house changed hands several times until it was occupied 1834-41 by Robert M. Kerrison, a doctor and 1842-81 by Matthew Thomas Husband, a leather merchant from Regent's Park, who rebuilt it probably soon after he took the lease. The Manor House, the easternmost of the demesne houses in Frognal Lane, was demolished in 1938 and three houses (nos. 59, 61, and 63 Frognal) were built by D. E. Harrington.

61 The architect D. E. Harrington built this house for himself as part of the 59-63 Frognal development he built.

63 The Manor House, the easternmost of the demesne houses in Frognal Lane, was demolished in 1938 and three houses (nos. 59, 61, and 63 Frognal) were built by D. E. Harrington.

65 Completing the frontage of 59-63 Frognal, No. 65 was built by its owner, Miss W. B. Acworth, in 1934.

66 North of Frognal Way, was designed by Connell, Ward & Lucas and built in 1937 of reinforced concrete 'in the extreme idiom of the day' as an attempt to 'épater les bourgeois'. Unlike most of the new houses, which were 'charming', it was considered out of character with the district's brick and Georgian architecture.

69 Anton Walbrook, the actor, died here in 1967.

79 George Hornblower built nos. 79-87 Frognal (the Oaks), including an Italianate watch tower for no. 79, for E. P. Musman in 1902.

94 The Old Mansion. A house, on the east side of Frognal was leased by a London draper, Charles Purrett, to Robert James in 1616. It was occupied by John Towse (d. 1645) and by a London goldsmith Richard Hodilow (d. 1698). It was rebuilt c. 1700 as a nine-bayed brick house.

96-98 Frognal Hall was occupied c. 1878-c. 1890 by Julius Talbot Airey but by c. 1903 it housed a school. Priory Lodge and Frognal Hall, threatened in 1899, finally succumbed in the 1920s. They were replaced by nos. 96-98 Frognal and nos. 3-9 Frognal Gardens, by E. B. Musman, in 1923 and by Frognal Way, which has been described as the 'showpiece of interwar Hampstead housing' and also as exhibiting styles ranging from neo-Georgian to Hollywood Spanish-Colonial and South African Dutch. The first house was built there in 1924 and at least five others were added from 1928 to 1935, including no. 7 by Oswald Milne, no. 13 by C. H. B. Quennell, no. 11 in 1925 by Albert Farmer, no. 5 in 1930 by Adrian Gilbert Scott for himself, no. 4 in 1934, no. 20 in 1934 for Gracie Fields, the singer, and no. 9, the Sun House, by Maxwell Fry in 1935. The last, Fry's first London building was one of the most important embodiments of the modern, international movement of the 1930s in Hampstead. Houses were also built on the east side of Frognal, between University College school and Frognal Way, in 1934.

97 Frognal House was in a dangerous state in 1896 but repaired, and Frognal Mansions flats were built by Palgrave & Co. next to it together with an astronomical observatory in 1897. The central area of Frognal lacking large council estates, has undergone less change than some other parts of Hampstead. It continued to attract those involved in the arts, like Kathleen Ferrier (1912-53), the contral to, at Frognal Mansions, no. 97 Frognal, from 1942.

99 Frognal House. The 15th-century tenement was probably the 'house called Frognal', which lay on the west side of the road, on the site later occupied by Frognal House. There were two houses or cottages there by the beginning of the 18th century, held by brothers, John and Thomas Smith. Thomas, a bricklayer, had divided his into two. All the property had passed to John Padmore of St. Giles-in-the-Fields by 1741, when he acquired waste near the house lately built there, presumably Frognal House, no. 99 Frognal. No. 99 housed the Sailors' Orphan Girls' Home from 1862 until 1869. General Charles de Gaulle lived from 1942 to 1944 in 99 Frognal.

100 Alexander Gray and James Neale designed no. 100 Frognal and five houses in Frognal Gardens, built by the local firm Allison & Foskett from 1890 to 1896.

102 William Page, historian and general editor of the Victoria County History, lived at Frognal Cottage (now 102 Frognal) from 1906 until 1922.

103 In 1762 the estate, which also included Upper Frognal Lodge and a pair of houses to the south, was held by John Padmore's nephew John Padmore Perry (d. 1764).

104-106 The architect Henry Flitcroft (1697-1769) built the house variously called Bleak Hall, Judges Bench House, and Branch Hill Lodge. On pieces of waste next to Northwood well, buildings had been erected by a lessee, Henry Popple, between 1731 and 1739. They included a house by 1745, when the property passed to Thomas, later Sir Thomas, Clarke (d. 1764), Master of the Rolls. A pair of cottages (nos. 104 and 106) was evidently built soon afterwards.

105, 107, 109 In 1741 the architect Henry Flitcroft (1697-1769) acquired from Thomas Watson-Wentworth, earl of Malton, a house dating from 1700 or earlier on what was then heath, a coach house and stable and another cottage, and himself obtained further grants of adjoining waste, including the lime walk illustrated by William Collins. (fn. 90) He probably built Frognal (later Montagu) Grove on the site (nos. 105 and 107); no. 109 was formed from the stabling.

108 Adjoining the 17th century Grove Cottage, no. 108 was built slightly later. Tamara Karsavina Diaghilev, the ballerina, lived at no. 108 Frognal in the 1950s.

110 The 17th century Grove Cottage stood behind an early inn, called successively the Three Pigeons, Pilgrim, and Duke of Cumberland's Head. E. V. Knox (1881-1971), the editor of Punch lived at no. 110 Frognal from 1945.

 

Based on: T F T Baker, Diane K Bolton and Patricia E C Croot, 'Hampstead: Introduction', in A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9, Hampstead, Paddington, ed. C R Elrington (London, 1989)




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CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LOCALITY


James Preston   
Added: 28 Apr 2021 09:06 GMT   

School
Was this the location of Rosslyn House prep school? I have a photograph of the Rosslyn House cricket team dated 1910 which features my grandfather (Alan Westbury Preston). He would have been 12 years old at the time. All the boys on the photo have been named. If this is the location of the school then it appears that the date of demolition is incorrect.

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Comment
Chris hutchison   
Added: 15 Oct 2023 03:04 GMT   

35 broadhurst gardens.
35 Broadhurst gardens was owned by famous opera singer Mr Herman “Simmy”Simberg. He had transformed it into a film and recording complex.
There was a film and animation studio on the ground floor. The recording facilities were on the next two floors.
I arrived in London from Australia in 1966 and worked in the studio as the tea boy and trainee recording engineer from Christmas 1966 for one year. The facility was leased by an American advertising company called Moreno Films. Mr Simbergs company Vox Humana used the studio for their own projects as well. I worked for both of them. I was so lucky. The manager was another wonderful gentleman called Jack Price who went on to create numerous songs for many famous singers of the day and also assisted the careers of Bob Marley and Jimmy Cliff. “Simmy” let me live in the bedsit,upper right hand window. Jack was also busy with projects with The Troggs,Bill Wyman,Peter Frampton. We did some great sessions with Manfred Mann and Alan Price. The Cream did some demos but that was before my time. We did lots of voice over work. Warren Mitchell and Ronnie Corbett were favourites. I went back in 1978 and “Simmy “ had removed all of the studio and it was now his home. His lounge room was still our studio in my minds eye!!


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LATEST LONDON-WIDE CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE PROJECT

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Wendy    
Added: 22 Mar 2024 15:33 GMT   

Polygon Buildings
Following the demolition of the Polygon, and prior to the construction of Oakshott Court in 1974, 4 tenement type blocks of flats were built on the site at Clarendon Sq/Phoenix Rd called Polygon Buildings. These were primarily for people working for the Midland Railway and subsequently British Rail. My family lived for 5 years in Block C in the 1950s. It seems that very few photos exist of these buildings.

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Steve   
Added: 19 Mar 2024 08:42 GMT   

Road construction and houses completed
New Charleville Circus road layout shown on Stanford’s Library Map Of London And Its Suburbs 1879 with access via West Hill only.

Plans showing street numbering were recorded in 1888 so we can concluded the houses in Charleville Circus were built by this date.

Source: Charleville Circus, Sydenham, London

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Steve   
Added: 19 Mar 2024 08:04 GMT   

Charleville Circus, Sydenham: One Place Study (OPS)
One Place Study’s (OPS) are a recent innovation to research and record historical facts/events/people focused on a single place �’ building, street, town etc.

I have created an open access OPS of Charleville Circus on WikiTree that has over a million members across the globe working on a single family tree for everyone to enjoy, for free, forever.

Source: Charleville Circus, Sydenham, London

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Comment
Charles   
Added: 8 Mar 2024 20:45 GMT   

My House
I want to know who lived in my house in the 1860’s.

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NH   
Added: 7 Mar 2024 11:41 GMT   

Telephone House
Donald Hunter House, formerly Telephone House, was the BT Offices closed in 2000

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Paul Cox   
Added: 5 Mar 2024 22:18 GMT   

War damage reinstatement plans of No’s 11 & 13 Aldine Street
Whilst clearing my elderly Mothers house of general detritus, I’ve come across original plans (one on acetate) of No’s 11 & 13 Aldine Street. Might they be of interest or should I just dispose of them? There are 4 copies seemingly from the one single acetate example. Seems a shame to just junk them as the level of detail is exquisite. No worries if of no interest, but thought I’d put it out there.

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Comment
Diana   
Added: 28 Feb 2024 13:52 GMT   

New Inn Yard, E1
My great grandparents x 6 lived in New Inn Yard. On this date, their son was baptised in nearby St Leonard’s Church, Shoreditch

Source: BDM London, Cripplegate and Shoreditch registers written by church clerk.

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Comment
Vic Stanley   
Added: 24 Feb 2024 17:38 GMT   

Postcose
The postcode is SE15, NOT SE1

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Blue House, NW3 Blue House is a block on Back Lane (Hampstead)
Blue House, NW3
Bolton House, NW3 Bolton House is a block on Frognal Rise (Hampstead)
Bolton House, NW3
Boyd House, NW3 Boyd House is located on Kidderpore Avenue (Hampstead)
Boyd House, NW3
Brabourne House, NW3 Brabourne House is sited on Frognal (Hampstead)
Brabourne House, NW3
Bracknell Gardens, NW3 Bracknell Gardens is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Bracknell Gardens, NW3
Bracknell Way, NW3 Bracknell Way is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Bracknell Way, NW3
Branch Hill House, NW3 Branch Hill House is a block on Spedan Close (Hampstead)
Branch Hill House, NW3
Branch Hill, NW3 Branch Hill is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Branch Hill, NW3
Burleigh House, NW3 Burleigh House is a block on West Heath Road (Hampstead)
Burleigh House, NW3
Cannon Lane, NW3 Cannon Lane is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Cannon Lane, NW3
Cannon Place, NW3 Cannon Place is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Cannon Place, NW3
Carlingford Road, NW3 Carlingford Road runs between Pilgrim’s Lane and Willoughby Road (Hampstead)
Carlingford Road, NW3
Carnegie House, NW3 Residential block (Hampstead)
Carnegie House, NW3
Caroline House, NW3 Caroline House is a building on The Mount (Hampstead)
Caroline House, NW3
Caulfield House, NW3 Caulfield House is a block on Kidderpore Avenue (Hampstead)
Caulfield House, NW3
Chesterford Gardens, NW3 Chesterford Gardens is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Chesterford Gardens, NW3
Christ Church, NW3 Christ Church is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Christ Church, NW3
Christchurch Hill, NW3 Christchurch Hill is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Christchurch Hill, NW3
Christchurch Passage, NW3 Christchurch Passage is a location in London (Hampstead)
Christchurch Passage, NW3
Church House, NW3 Church House is sited on Cannon Place (Hampstead)
Church House, NW3
Church Row, NW3 Church Row is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Church Row, NW3
Clark House, NW3 Clark House is a block on Finchley Road (Hampstead)
Clark House, NW3
Coach House Yard, NW3 Coach House Yard is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Coach House Yard, NW3
Coach House, NW3 Coach House is a block on Templewood Avenue (Hampstead)
Coach House, NW3
Columbas Drive, NW3 Columbas Drive is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Columbas Drive, NW3
Conrad Court, NW3 Conrad Court is a block on Redington Gardens (Hampstead)
Conrad Court, NW3
Croft House, NW3 Croft House is a block on Rosecroft Avenue (Hampstead)
Croft House, NW3
Croft Way, NW3 Croft Way is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Croft Way, NW3
Croftway, NW3 Croftway is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Croftway, NW3
Denning Road, NW3 Denning Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Denning Road, NW3
Downshire Hill, NW3 Downshire Hill was originally developed at the beginning of the 19th century (Hampstead)
Downshire Hill, NW3
East Heath Road, NW3 East Heath Road bounds the western rim of Hampstead Heath (Hampstead)
East Heath Road, NW3
East View, NW3 East View is a location in London (Hampstead)
East View, NW3
Eldon Court, NW3 Eldon Court is a block on Eldon Grove (Belsize Park)
Eldon Court, NW3
Ellerdale Close, NW3 Ellerdale Close is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Ellerdale Close, NW3
Ellerdale Road, NW3 Ellerdale Road was added to the streetscape of Hampstead in 1874 (Hampstead)
Ellerdale Road, NW3
Elm Row, NW3 Elm Row is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Elm Row, NW3
Falcon Lodge, NW3 Falcon Lodge is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Falcon Lodge, NW3
Ferncroft Avenue, NW3 Ferncroft Avenue is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Ferncroft Avenue, NW3
Firecrest Drive, NW3 Firecrest Drive is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Firecrest Drive, NW3
Fitzjohn’s Avenue, NW3 Fitzjohn’s Avenue links Hampstead with Swiss Cottage (Hampstead)
Fitzjohn’s Avenue, NW3
Flask Cottages, NW3 Flask Cottages is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Flask Cottages, NW3
Flask Walk, NW3 Flask Walk was named after the mineral water sold at a tavern here (Hampstead)
Flask Walk, NW3
Fleet House, NW3 Fleet House is located on Vale of Health (Hampstead)
Fleet House, NW3
Foley House, NW3 Foley House is a block on East Heath Road (Hampstead)
Foley House, NW3
Fountain House, NW3 Fountain House is located on Lower Terrace (Hampstead)
Fountain House, NW3
Frognal Close, NW3 Frognal Close is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Frognal Close, NW3
Frognal Gardens, NW3 This is a street in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Frognal Gardens, NW3
Frognal House, NW3 Frognal House is a block on Frognal (Hampstead)
Frognal House, NW3
Frognal Lane, NW3 Frognal Lane is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Frognal Lane, NW3
Frognal Rise, NW3 Frognal Rise is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Frognal Rise, NW3
Frognal Way, NW3 Frognal Way is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Frognal Way, NW3
Frognal, NW3 A road called Frognal runs from Church Row in Hampstead downhill to Finchley Road and follows the course of a stream which goes on to form the River Westbourne (Hampstead)
Frognal, NW3
Gainsborough Gardens, NW3 Gainsborough Gardens is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Gainsborough Gardens, NW3
Gainsborough House, NW3 Gainsborough House is sited on Frognal Rise (Hampstead)
Gainsborough House, NW3
Gardnor Road, NW3 Gardnor Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Gardnor Road, NW3
Gayton Crescent, NW3 Gayton Crescent is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Gayton Crescent, NW3
Gayton Road, NW3 Gayton Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Gayton Road, NW3
Gentler House, NW3 Gentler House is a block on Finchley Road (Hampstead)
Gentler House, NW3
Grange Gardens, NW3 Grange Gardens is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Grange Gardens, NW3
Grayton Crescent, NW3 Grayton Crescent is a location in London (Hampstead)
Grayton Crescent, NW3
Greenaway Gardens, NW3 Greenaway Gardens is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Greenaway Gardens, NW3
Greenhill, NW3 Greenhill is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Greenhill, NW3
Grove Place, NW3 Grove Place is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Grove Place, NW3
Hampstead Grove, NW3 Hampstead Grove runs parallel to Heath Street and leads south to Holly Bush Hill (Hampstead)
Hampstead Grove, NW3
Hampstead High Street, NW3 Hampstead High Street is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Hampstead High Street, NW3
Hampstead Square, NW3 Hampstead Square is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Hampstead Square, NW3
Hawthorne House, NW3 Hawthorne House is sited on Upper Terrace (Hampstead)
Hawthorne House, NW3
Heartfield House, NW3 Heartfield House is a block on Finchley Road (Hampstead)
Heartfield House, NW3
Heath Brow, NW3 Heath Brow is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Heath Brow, NW3
Heath Drive, NW3 Heath Drive, one of the roads connecting Hampstead with the Finchley Road was originally West Hampstead Avenue (Hampstead)
Heath Drive, NW3
Heath House, NW3 Heath House is a block on Spaniards Road (Hampstead)
Heath House, NW3
Heath Side, NW3 Heath Side is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Heath Side, NW3
Heath Street, NW3 Heath Street is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Heath Street, NW3
Heath Villas, NW3 Heath Villas is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Heath Villas, NW3
Henderson Court, NW3 Henderson Court is a block on Fitzjohn’s Avenue (Hampstead)
Henderson Court, NW3
Heysham House, NW3 Heysham House is a block on Heysham Lane (Hampstead)
Heysham House, NW3
Heysham Lane, NW3 Heysham Lane is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Heysham Lane, NW3
Highview House, NW3 Highview House is a block on Upper Terrace (Hampstead)
Highview House, NW3
Hill House, NW3 Hill House is a building on Redington Road (Hampstead)
Hill House, NW3
Hillsdown House, NW3 Hillsdown House is sited on Hampstead High Street (Hampstead)
Hillsdown House, NW3
Hillside Court, NW3 Hillside Court is sited on Finchley Road (Hampstead)
Hillside Court, NW3
Holford Road, NW3 This is a street in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Holford Road, NW3
Holly Berry Lane, NW3 Holly Berry Lane is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Holly Berry Lane, NW3
Holly Bush Hill, NW3 Holly Bush Hill is a location in London (Hampstead)
Holly Bush Hill, NW3
Holly Bush Vale, NW3 Holly Bush Vale is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Holly Bush Vale, NW3
Holly Hill, NW3 Holly Hill is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Holly Hill, NW3
Holly Mount, NW3 Holly Mount is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Holly Mount, NW3
Holly Walk, NW3 Holly Walk connects Holly Hill with Church Row (Hampstead)
Holly Walk, NW3
Hollyberry Lane, NW3 Hollyberry Lane is a location in London (Hampstead)
Hollyberry Lane, NW3
Hollycroft Avenue, NW3 Hollycroft Avenue is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Hollycroft Avenue, NW3
Judges Walk House, NW3 Judges Walk House is a block on Branch Hill (Hampstead)
Judges Walk House, NW3
Judges’ Walk, NW3 Judges’ Walk is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Judges’ Walk, NW3
Keats Grove, NW3 John Keats lived in the road and his house is now a museum (Hampstead)
Keats Grove, NW3
Kemplay Road, NW3 Kemplay Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Kemplay Road, NW3
Kidderpore Avenue, NW3 Kidderpore Avenue is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Kidderpore Avenue, NW3
Klippan House, NW3 Klippan House is a block on Well Walk (Hampstead)
Klippan House, NW3
Ladywell Court, NW3 Ladywell Court is a block on East Heath Road (Hampstead)
Ladywell Court, NW3
Lakis Close, NW3 Lakis Close is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Lakis Close, NW3
Langland Crescent, HA7 Langland Crescent is a location in London (Hampstead)
Langland Crescent, HA7
Langland Gardens, NW3 Langland Gardens is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Langland Gardens, NW3
Langtry House, NW3 Langtry House is a block on East Heath Road (Hampstead)
Langtry House, NW3
Lawn House, NW3 Lawn House is located on Elm Row (Hampstead)
Lawn House, NW3
Lime Avenue, NW3 A named road at its East Heath Road end, Lime Avenue as a pathway stretches across Hampstead Heath (Hampstead)
Lime Avenue, NW3
Lindfield Gardens, NW3 Lindfield Gardens connects Langland Gardens with Arkwright Road (Hampstead)
Lindfield Gardens, NW3
Lower Terrace, NW3 Lower Terrace is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Lower Terrace, NW3
Lyncroft Gardens, NW6 Lyncroft Gardens is a street in Fortune Green, NW6 (Hampstead)
Lyncroft Gardens, NW6
Manor House, NW3 Manor House is a block on Downshire Hill (Hampstead)
Manor House, NW3
Mansion Gardens, NW3 This is a street in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Mansion Gardens, NW3
Maresfield Gardens, NW3 Maresfield Gardens is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Maresfield Gardens, NW3
Marsfield Gardens, NW3 Marsfield Gardens is a location in London (Hampstead)
Marsfield Gardens, NW3
Merlin House, NW3 Merlin House is a block on Oak Hill Park (Hampstead)
Merlin House, NW3
Mondrian House, NW3 Mondrian House is a block on Platt’s Lane (Hampstead)
Mondrian House, NW3
Mount Vernon House, NW3 Mount Vernon House is located on Mount Vernon (Hampstead)
Mount Vernon House, NW3
Mount Vernon, NW3 Mount Vernon is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Mount Vernon, NW3
Mulberry Close, NW3 Mulberry Close is a location in London (Hampstead)
Mulberry Close, NW3
Mulberry House, NW3 Mulberry House is a block on Church Row (Hampstead)
Mulberry House, NW3
Netherall Gardens, NW3 Netherall Gardens is a location in London (Hampstead)
Netherall Gardens, NW3
Netherhall Gardens, NW3 Netherhall Gardens is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Netherhall Gardens, NW3
Netherhall Way, NW3 Netherhall Way is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Netherhall Way, NW3
New End Square, NW3 New End Square is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
New End Square, NW3
New End, NW3 New End is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
New End, NW3
Nicholson House, NW3 Nicholson House is a block on Finchley Road (Hampstead)
Nicholson House, NW3
Northcote House, NW3 Northcote House is a block on Heath Street (Hampstead)
Northcote House, NW3
Oak Hill House, NW3 Oak Hill House is a block on Redington Road (Hampstead)
Oak Hill House, NW3
Oak Hill Park Mews, NW3 Oak Hill Park Mews first appears on the 1900 map (Hampstead)
Oak Hill Park Mews, NW3
Oak Hill Park Mews, NW3 Oak Hill Park Mews is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Oak Hill Park Mews, NW3
Oak Hill Park, NW3 Oak Hill Park is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Oak Hill Park, NW3
Oak Hill Way, NW3 Oak Hill Way is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Oak Hill Way, NW3
Oak Tree House, NW3 Oak Tree House is a block on Redington Gardens (Hampstead)
Oak Tree House, NW3
Oakhill Avenue, NW3 Oakhill Avenue is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Oakhill Avenue, NW3
Old Brewery Mews, NW3 Old Brewery Mews is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Old Brewery Mews, NW3
Oriel Court, NW3 Oriel Court is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Oriel Court, NW3
Oriel Place, NW3 Oriel Place is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Oriel Place, NW3
Osprey Court, NW6 Osprey Court lies on the Finchley Road (Hampstead)
Osprey Court, NW6
Otto Schiff House, NW3 Otto Schiff House is a block on Nutley Terrace (Hampstead)
Otto Schiff House, NW3
Pavilion Court, NW3 Pavilion Court is a block on Frognal Rise (Hampstead)
Pavilion Court, NW3
Penrose Gardens, NW3 Penrose Gardens is a location in London (Hampstead)
Penrose Gardens, NW3
Perrin’s Lane, NW3 This is a street in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Perrin’s Lane, NW3
Perrins Court, NW3 Perrins Court is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Perrins Court, NW3
Perrins Walk, NW3 Perrins Walk is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Perrins Walk, NW3
Pilgrim’s Lane, NW3 This is a street in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Pilgrim’s Lane, NW3
Pilgrim’s Place, NW3 This is a street in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Pilgrim’s Place, NW3
PO Box 4, NW3 Pilgrims Lane is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
PO Box 4, NW3
PO Box 4, NW3 Fortune Green Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
PO Box 4, NW3
PO Box 4, NW3 East Heath Road is a road in the postcode area (Hampstead)
PO Box 4, NW3
Prince Arthur Mews, NW3 Prince Arthur Mews is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Prince Arthur Mews, NW3
Prince Arthur Road, NW3 Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn and son of Queen Victoria opened a home for sailor’s daughters in the area in 1869 (Hampstead)
Prince Arthur Road, NW3
Rackham House, NW3 Rackham House is a block on Kidderpore Avenue (Hampstead)
Rackham House, NW3
Redington Gardens, NW3 Redington Gardens is the northern extension of Heath Drive in Hampstead. (Hampstead)
Redington Gardens, NW3
Redington Road, NW3 Redington Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Redington Road, NW3
Rosecroft Avenue, NW3 Rosecroft Avenue is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Rosecroft Avenue, NW3
Rosslyn Mews, NW3 Rosslyn Mews is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Rosslyn Mews, NW3
Rudall Crescent, NW3 Rudall Crescent was laid out by a builder John Culverhouse in 1878 (Hampstead)
Rudall Crescent, NW3
Savoy Court, NW3 Savoy Court is a block on Firecrest Drive (Hampstead)
Savoy Court, NW3
Schreiber House, NW3 Schreiber House is a block on West Heath Road (Hampstead)
Schreiber House, NW3
Shepherd’s Path, NW3 Shepherd?s Path is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Shepherd’s Path, NW3
Shepherd’s Path, NW3 Shepherd’s Path is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Shepherd’s Path, NW3
Shepherds Walk, NW3 Shepherds Walk is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Shepherds Walk, NW3
Spaniards Road, NW3 Spaniards Road is so-named as it leads to the Spaniards Inn (Hampstead)
Spaniards Road, NW3
Spedan Close, NW3 Spedan Close was the site of an innovative council housing scheme (Hampstead)
Spedan Close, NW3
Spencer House, NW3 Spencer House is sited on Vale of Health (Hampstead)
Spencer House, NW3
Squire’s Mount, NW3 Squire’s Mount leads south off of East Heath Road (Hampstead)
Squire’s Mount, NW3
Squires Mount House, NW3 Squires Mount House is a block on Squire’s Mount (Hampstead)
Squires Mount House, NW3
Streatley Place, NW3 Streatley Place is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Streatley Place, NW3
Studholme Court, NW3 Studholme Court is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Studholme Court, NW3
Sun House, NW3 Sun House is a block on Frognal Way (Hampstead)
Sun House, NW3
Telegraph Hill, NW3 Telegraph Hill is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Telegraph Hill, NW3
Templewood Avenue, NW3 Templewood Avenue is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Templewood Avenue, NW3
Templewood Gardens, NW3 Templewood Gardens is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Templewood Gardens, NW3
The Gables, NW3 The Gables is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
The Gables, NW3
The Garden House, NW3 The Garden House is a block on Rosecroft Avenue (Hampstead)
The Garden House, NW3
The Mount, NW3 The Mount is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
The Mount, NW3
The Old Court House, NW3 The Old Court House is a building on North End Way (Hampstead)
The Old Court House, NW3
The Wells House, NW3 The Wells House is a block on Well Walk (Hampstead)
The Wells House, NW3
Thurlow Road, NW3 Thurlow Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Thurlow Road, NW3
Tower Close, NW3 Tower Close was built on the site of Eldon House in 1982 by Pollard Thomas & Edwards (Belsize Park)
Tower Close, NW3
Tree House, NW3 Tree House is a block on Well Road (Hampstead)
Tree House, NW3
Upper Terrace House, NW3 Upper Terrace House is sited on Upper Terrace (Hampstead)
Upper Terrace House, NW3
Upper Terrace, NW3 Upper Terrace is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Upper Terrace, NW3
Vale House, NW3 Vale House is a block on Vale of Health (Hampstead)
Vale House, NW3
Vale of Health, NW3 Vale of Health is a road and community on Hampstead Heath (Hampstead)
Vale of Health, NW3
Vane Close, NW3 Vane Close is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Vane Close, NW3
Village Close, NW3 Village Close is a location in London (Hampstead)
Village Close, NW3
Village Mount, NW3 Village Mount is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Village Mount, NW3
Vine House, NW3 Vine House is a block on Hampstead Square (Hampstead)
Vine House, NW3
Volta House, NW3 Volta House is located on Windmill Hill (Hampstead)
Volta House, NW3
Well Passage, NW3 Well Passage links Well Road and Well Walk in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Well Passage, NW3
Well Road, NW3 Well Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Well Road, NW3
Well Walk, NW3 Well Walk is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Well Walk, NW3
Whitestone House, NW3 Whitestone House is a block on Whitestone Lane (Hampstead)
Whitestone House, NW3
Whitestone Lane, NW3 Whitestone Lane is a road in the NW3 postcode area (Hampstead)
Whitestone Lane, NW3
Willoughby House, NW3 Willoughby House is a block on Willoughby Road (Hampstead)
Willoughby House, NW3
Willoughby Road, NW3 Willoughby Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Willoughby Road, NW3
Willow Road, NW3 Willow Road is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Willow Road, NW3
Windmill Hill House, NW3 Windmill Hill House is located on Hampstead Grove (Hampstead)
Windmill Hill House, NW3
Windmill Hill, NW3 Windmill Hill is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Windmill Hill, NW3
Yorkshire Grey Place, NW3 Yorkshire Grey Place is a street in Hampstead (Hampstead)
Yorkshire Grey Place, NW3

NEARBY PUBS
Freemasons Arms
Freemasons Arms
King William IV
King William IV
The Duke of Hamilton
The Duke of Hamilton
The Flask
The Flask
The Holly Bush
The Holly Bush
The Horse Shoe
The Horse Shoe
The Wells Tavern
The Wells Tavern
Ye Olde White Bear
Ye Olde White Bear


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