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...
In its time, it was one of the busiest fire stations in London. Fires frequently broke out in the nearby wharves, and during the Blitz, the station attended many fires following bomb attacks. It ha...
Apprenticed to his father in August 1700 – ‘John Meard Citizen and Turner... his father and Master admitted to this Freedom’ (Freedom Admissions Register of the Turners’ Company). On his father’s ...
Whittington had a number of addresses in London: Hart Street, Mark Lane, Sweedon’s Passage, Grub Street (now Milton Street) and a house in (now) College Hill. This last was a significant purchase ...
From their website: "We are a social enterprise working in Waterloo and North Southwark, London. From a derelict site in 1984, we have created a vibrant, diverse and welcoming place for people to l...
Named after the first Duke of Montagu, it was the amalgamation of two late-seventeenth century houses with the addition of Park Corner House. The residence of Caroline of Brunswick, queen consort t...
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