Built in 1830 by Sir William Dundas. Demolished in 1933 to make way for the flats there now.
This extract comes from an 1893 map. The footprint is slightly different in this 1867 map.
Built in 1830 by Sir William Dundas. Demolished in 1933 to make way for the flats there now.
This extract comes from an 1893 map. The footprint is slightly different in this 1867 map.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Queensberry House - 1830
{Round plaque:} Upon this site formerly stood the Palace of Richmond, built b...
The picture source website points out: The house at which this caller is visiting is No. 11, and there is a brass plate on the door bearing the words "G. Baxter, Offices No. 12".
From British History on-line: "The Bethnal Green and East London Housing Association was formed in 1926 by an Industrial Housing Fellowship Group. It was supported by the Poplar Ruridecanal {sic} C...
Sited just to the east of Charing Cross and Nelson's column, where Northumberland Avenue and Waterstones now (2024) are, the picture source, Wikipedia, has a very useful map, but there we also read...
A V1 bomb fell on Granville Road early on a Sunday morning. 15 people were killed and 25 seriously injured. Twelve houses were destroyed and 100 others damaged. Holy Trinity church was badly damag...
The original Jubilee Market, to the left of this Jubilee Market Hall, was erected in 1904.
Novelist and poet. Born Yorkshire. Youngest member of the Bonte literary family. Novels: 'Agnes Grey', 'Tenant of Wildfell Hall'. See Charlotte Brontë for more.
This church was built, inside the Park, in 1867 to meet the needs of the expanding population, 22 years after the Park opened in 1845. Following WW2 bomb damage the church was demolished (our end ...
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