Place    To 1890

The Polygon

Categories: Architecture

Place

Polygon Road was the site of The Polygon - a fifteen sided building of 32 houses situated around a garden. William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft lived at No 29 for a time and their daughter, later to become Mary Shelley, was born here. Charles Dickens lodged at No 17 some years later when the area was in decline (in 1828). The Polygon was demolished in 1890.

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
The Polygon

Commemorated ati

Somers Town Mural

This mural was commissioned by the GLC in 1980 and moved to this site by St P...

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Other Subjects

T. & W. Stone
1 memorial
Laing Homes

Laing Homes

A building group which was a division of John Laing plc (a company which was founded in the 1840s). It was eventually purchased by the Wimpey group. 2025: This image came from New Homes for Sale i...

Group, Architecture, Commerce

1 memorial
Powell and Moya

Powell and Moya

Architects. The two partners were: Sir Arnold Joseph Philip Powell (1921 – 2003), usually known as Philip Powell, and John Hidalgo Moya (1920 – 1994), sometimes known as Jacko Moya, born in America...

Group, Architecture, USA

1 memorial
Councillor A. C. Shearing

Councillor A. C. Shearing

Architect of the British Legion Hornsey in 1929.

Person, Architecture, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Liam O'Connor

Liam O'Connor

Architect, specialising in memorials, see the practice's website.

Person, Architecture

2 memorials

Previously viewed

Charles Robertson

Charles Robertson

Worked in the civil service, 1902 - 1925, in the Egyptian Ministry of Education. At the 1931 London County Council election, Robertson was elected for the Labour Party in Islington East. He lost th...

Person, Education, Politics & Administration, Egypt, Scotland

1 memorial
Giltspur Street compter

Giltspur Street compter

EC1, Giltspur Street

Discovering London took great delight in proving that the "cells" in the pub next door, the Viaduct, are, contrary to urban myth, nothing...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor - Norwood

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor - Norwood

SE25, Dagnall Park, 30

This was the first plaque erected to a black person, in 1975.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator