Eversholt Street, NW1

Road in/near Somers Town, existing between the 1810s and now

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(51.53221 -0.13611, 51.532 -0.136) 
MAP YEAR:18001810182018301860190019502024 
 
Road · * · NW1 ·
July
13
2021
Eversholt Street connects Euston with Camden Town.

The origins of Eversholt Street lay in the 1750s when the New Road (later Euston Road) was established to bypass the congestion of London. North of this road were fields, brick works and market gardens. There was an informal path heading south from what later became Camden Town roughly along the line of the later street.

At the end of the 17th century, the Lord Chancellor John Somers acquired the local freehold. The immediate area was, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, known as Fig Mead.

The course of Eversholt Street began in the 1810s as the area developed. It provided a new route from the New Road with Camden Town. The name Eversholt Street was originally given only to its very northern, Bedford Estate part above Cranleigh Street (which was itself formerly Johnson Street). The Eversholt name refers to a village in Bedfordshire, most of the land in the village being owned by the Dukes of Bedford.

Eversholt Street is now part of a long series of streets going in the same direction with many names which starts at Bush House at the Aldwych. Kingsway becomes Southampton Row, then in turn Russell Square, Woburn Place, Tavistock Square, Upper Woburn Place and Eversholt Street.

North of the Euston Road, this part of Eversholt Street was originally Seymour Street.

At the Euston Road end of Eversholt Street/Seymour Street was, to the west of the street, the original Ampthill Square, proposed as a garden suburb by the land owner, the Duke of Bedford. Like many local names, Ampthill referred to Bedfordshire. Half of the square was bought by the London and Birmingham Railway for its tracks into Euston station and the station now dominates the southernmost section of Eversholt Street.

Ampthill Square was directly hit by a bomb during the Second World War. The Ampthill Square Estate was subsequently built in the 1960s.

Further along Eversholt Street, and before it was laid out, the first local housing was built at the Polygon in 1784. Mary Wollstonecraft lived there with her husband William Godwin, and died there in 1797 after giving birth to the future Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein. Dickens lived in the Polygon briefly as a child. The site of the Polygon is now occupied by a block of council flats called Oakshott Court.

The original name of this section of Eversholt Street was Upper Seymour Street.

In 1793 Frenchman Jacob Leroux leased land from the Somers family for building. Refugees from the French Revolution bought some of the houses and Somers Town began. Upper Seymour Street, once laid out, marked a western boundary.



Eversholt Street in Somers Town
(click image to enlarge)


Plans for a more ’select’ Somers Town deteriorated from Leroux’s plan as the surrounding land was subsequently sold off in smaller lots for cheaper housing, especially after the start of construction in the 1830s of the railway lines into Euston. In this period the area housed a large transient population of labourers and the population density of the area soared.

Briefly a small section of the street had the original name Crawley Street and finally a section which has always been called Eversholt Street.

Where the street becomes Camden High Street, there is a statue commemorating Richard Cobden at the junction where Mornington Crescent station is situated. Richard Cobden MP led the fight for the repeal of the Corn Laws in the 1840s. The statue was erected by public subscription three years after his death. The French emporer Napoleon III was the principal contributor - Cobden had been contributory in establishing a free trade agreement with France in 1860.

Eversholt Street continues northwards as Camden High Street.



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Main source: Survey of London | British History Online
Further citations and sources



NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
Agar Town Agar Town was a short-lived area, built in the 1840s, of St Pancras.
Ampthill Square Estate The Ampthill Square Estate (also known as the Ampthill Estate) is a housing estate built in the mid 1960s to replace Victorian housing in the area.
Carreras Cigarette Factory The Carreras Cigarette Factory is a large art deco building in Camden.
Mornington Crescent to Euston walk To a certain crowd, London’s best loved station
Old St Pancras Churchyard Old St Pancras churchyard, served not only as a burial place for the parishioners but also for Roman Catholics from all around London.
Ossulston Estate The Ossulston Estate is a multi-storey council estate built by the London County Council in Somers Town between 1927 and 1931.
Regents Park Estate, NW1 The Regent’s Park Estate is a large housing estate in the London Borough of Camden.
Rhodes Farm Rhodes Farm was situated on Hampstead Road.
Somers Town Somers Town is a district close to three main line rail termini - Euston, St Pancras and King’s Cross.
St James Gardens St James Gardens were used as a burial ground between 1790 and 1853.

NEARBY STREETS
Albert Street, NW1 Albert Street runs north-south in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Aldenham House, NW1 Aldenham House is located on Aldenham Street (Somers Town)
Aldenham Mews, NW1 Aldenham Mews was situated off Aldenham Street (Somers Town)
Aldenham Street, NW1 Aldenham Street – Richard Platt, 16th century brewer and local landowner, gave land for the endowment of Aldenham School, Hertfordshire (Somers Town)
Ampthill Square, NW1 Ampthill Square is a name which has existed in two different time periods (Somers Town)
Arlington Road, NW1 Arlington Road is ultimately a noble derivation of Harlington, Middlesex (Camden Town)
Ascot House, NW1 Ascot House is a block on Redhill Street (Camden Town)
Augustus House, NW1 Augustus House is a block on Stanhope Street (Camden Town)
Augustus Street, NW1 Augustus Street - after Ernest Augustus, King of Hanover, brother of the Prince Regent (George IV) (Euston)
Bagshot House, NW1 Bagshot House is located on Redhill Street (Camden Town)
Barclay Street, NW1 Barclay Street led from Aldenham Street northwards to Medburn Street (Somers Town)
Barnby Street, NW1 Barnby Street is a street in Camden Town (Somers Town)
Bayham Place, NW1 Bayham Place is a short cobbled street (Camden Town)
Beatty Street, NW1 Beatty Street is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Mornington Crescent)
Bridgeway Street, NW1 Bridgeway Street was a new 1937 name for Bridgewater Street (Somers Town)
Brill Place, NW1 Brill Place is named after the former Brill Row in the area (Somers Town)
Camberley House, NW1 Camberley House is a block on Redhill Street (Camden Town)
Cambridge Crescent, N1C Cambridge Crescent was a former street of Agar Town (St Pancras)
Camden Street, NW1 Camden Street is named for Charles Pratt, 1st Earl Camden (Camden Town)
Cardington Street, NW1 Cardington Street is a rare London street in that it closed for good as late as 2017 (Euston)
Carlow House, NW1 Carlow House is a building on Mary Terrace (Camden Town)
Carlow Street, NW1 Carlow Street leads off Arlington Road (Mornington Crescent)
Chalton House, NW1 Chalton House is a block on Chalton Street (Somers Town)
Chalton Street, NW1 Chalton Street was formerly Charlton Street, and runs parallel to Ossulston Street (Somers Town)
Charrington Street, NW1 Charrington Street runs south to north and is a continuation of Ossulston Street (Somers Town)
Chenies Place, NW1 Chenies Place is named after local landowners the dukes of Bedford, also titled Barons Russell of Chenies (Somers Town)
Christopher Place, NW1 Christopher Place leads off Chalton Street (St Pancras)
Church Hill, NW1 Church Hill replaced the Pancras Wells (St Pancras)
Churchway, NW1 Churchway, as ’Church Way’, formed part of old pathway to St Pancras Old Church (Euston)
Clarendon Grove, NW1 Clarendon Grove ran south from Clarendon Square (Somers Town)
Clarendon House, NW1 Clarendon House is a block on Werrington Street (Somers Town)
Clarkson Row, NW1 Clarkson Row is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Mornington Crescent)
Cobden House, NW1 Cobden House is located on Beatty Street (Mornington Crescent)
Cooper’s Lane, NW1 Cooper’s Lane gives its name to the Cooper’s Lane Estate (St Pancras)
Cranleigh Street, NW1 Cranleigh Street was named in connection with the Barons Ossulston peerage (Somers Town)
Crowndale Court, NW1 Crowndale Court is a road in the NW1 postcode area (St Pancras)
Crowndale Road, NW1 Crowndale Road was at first called Fig Lane and then Gloucester Place (Somers Town)
Cumberland Market, NW1 Cumberland Market is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Datchet House, NW1 Datchet House is a building on Augustus Street (Euston)
Doric Way, NW1 Doric Way is named for the doric Euston Arch, built in 1837 and demolished in 1961 (Somers Town)
Drummond Crescent, NW1 Drummond Crescent named after Lady Caroline Drummond (Euston)
Edith Neville Cottages, NW1 Edith Neville Cottages lies between Drummond Crescent and Doric Way (Euston)
Equity Buildings, NW1 Equity Buildings was replaced by Walker Court (Somers Town)
Ernest Street, NW1 Ernest Street appears on the 1860 map as the name for part of Robert Street (Euston)
Euston House, NW1 Euston House is a block on Eversholt Street (Euston)
Eversholt House, NW1 Eversholt House is a block on Eversholt Street (Somers Town)
Eversholt Street, NW1 Eversholt Street connects Euston with Camden Town (Somers Town)
Fig Lane, NW1 Fig Lane was the original name for the road later called Crowndale Road (Camden Town)
Gladwin House, NW1 Gladwin House is a block on Cranleigh Street (Somers Town)
Godwin Court, NW1 Godwin Court is a block on Crowndale Road (Somers Town)
Goldington Crescent, NW1 Goldington Crescent connects Crowndale Road and Pancras Road (St Pancras)
Goldington Street, NW1 Goldington Street was formerly part of the Duke of Bedford’s Figs Mead Estate (later Bedford New Town). The Duke also owned land in Goldington, Bedfordshire (St Pancras)
Goldsmiths House, NW1 Goldsmiths House is a block on Augustus Street (Camden Town)
Goodwin Court, NW1 Goodwin Court is located on Goodwin Court (Somers Town)
Granby Terrace, NW1 Granby Terrace was previously called Granby Street (Camden Town)
Greater London House, NW1 Greater London House is located on Hampstead Road (Mornington Crescent)
Hampden Close, NW1 Hampden Close is a street in Camden Town (Somers Town)
Hampden Street, NW1 Hampden Street was renamed as part of Polygon Road in 1938 (Somers Town)
Hampstead Road, NW1 Hampstead Road connects the Euston Road with Camden (Euston)
Harrington House, NW1 Harrington House is a block on Harrington Street (Euston)
Harrington Square, NW1 Harrington Square is named after the Earl of Harrington, one of whose daughters married the seventh Duke of Bedford (Mornington Crescent)
Harrington Street, NW1 Harrington Street leads north from Varndell Street (Euston)
Hurdwick House, NW1 Hurdwick House can be found on Harrington Square (Mornington Crescent)
Ian Hamilton House, NW1 Ian Hamilton House is a block on Doric Way (Euston)
Johnson House, NW1 Johnson House is a block on Cranleigh Street (Somers Town)
King’s Terrace, NW1 King’s Terrace was formerly Little King Street South and Little King Street North (Camden Town)
Kings Place, NW1 Kings Place (sometimes King’s Place) was once a turning off Pancras Road (St Pancras)
Lancing Street, NW1 Lancing Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Lidlington Place, NW1 Lidlington Place, named after a village in Bedfordshire, connects Houghton Place and Eversholt Street (Somers Town)
Mackworth House, NW1 Mackworth House is a block on Augustus Street (Euston)
Medburn Street, NW1 Medburn Street is named after a farm between Elstree and Radlett in Hertfordshire (Somers Town)
Metro House, NW1 Metro House is a block on Arlington Road (Mornington Crescent)
Middlesex Street, NW1 Middlesex Street was north of Chapel Street and partly lost to the Midland Railway Somers Town Goods Depot (St Pancras)
Miller Street, NW1 Miller Street is a street in Camden Town (Mornington Crescent)
Mornington Court, NW1 Mornington Court is sited on Arlington Road (Mornington Crescent)
Mornington Crescent, NW1 Mornington Crescent was named after Garret Wesley, 1st Earl of Mornington (Mornington Crescent)
Mornington Street, NW1 Mornington Street is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Mornington Terrace, NW1 Mornington Terrace - as Mornington Road - dates from before 1840 (Camden Town)
Nash Street, NW1 Nash Street is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Oakley Square, NW1 Oakley Square was so-named as this land was formerly owned by Dukes of Bedford, who also owned land in Oakley, Bedfordshire (Somers Town)
Oakshott Court, NW1 Oakshott Court was built in 1974 (Somers Town)
Ossulston Street, NW1 Ossulston Street, a principal north-south route through Somers Town, begins at Euston Road. (St Pancras)
Pancras Road, NW1 Pancras Road links the eastern side of St Pancras station, crossing under a bridge, with Camden Town on the west side (St Pancras)
Park View House, NW1 Park View House (previously Cecil Rhodes House) was constructed on the Goldington Estate (St Pancras)
Park Village East, NW1 Park Village East was part of a proposed canal-side village (Camden Town)
Penryn Street, NW1 Penryn Street - as Percy Street - first appeared in rate books during 1852, when eighteen houses were occupied (St Pancras)
Phoenix Road, NW1 Phoenix Road, together with Brill Place, is the suggested direct walking route between Euston and St Pancras stations (Somers Town)
Platt Street, NW1 Platt Street formed part of the Aldenham School (Brewers’ Company) Estate (Somers Town)
Polygon Road, NW1 Polygon Road’s name commemorates the innovative Polygon building that once dominated the former Clarendon Square’s centre. (Somers Town)
Purchese Street, NW1 Purchese Street was named after Frederick Purchese, local resident, vestryman, county council member and Mayor of St Pancras (Somers Town)
Redhill Street, NW1 Redhill Street is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Richmond House, NW1 Richmond House is a block on Park Village East (Mornington Crescent)
Robert Street, NW1 Robert Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Ryedale House, NW1 Ryedale House is a block on Eversholt Street (Somers Town)
Savant House, NW1 Savant House is a block on Camden High Street (Camden Town)
Seymour House, NW1 Residential block (Euston)
Silsoe House, NW1 Silsoe House is sited on Park Village East (Camden Town)
Somers Close, NW1 Somers Close is a modern southern extension of Penryn Street (Somers Town)
St Margarets House, NW1 St Margarets House is a block on Polygon Road (Somers Town)
St Martin’s House, NW1 St Martin’s House is a block on Polygon Road (Somers Town)
St Richard’s House, NW1 St Richard’s House is a block on Eversholt Street (Somers Town)
Stanhope Parade, NW1 Stanhope Parade is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Stanhope Street, NW1 Stanhope Street runs parallel to Hampstead Road, one block west (Euston)
Stibbington Street, NW1 Stibbington Street was absorbed into Chalton Street in 1938 (Somers Town)
Swinley House, NW1 Swinley House is a block on Redhill Street (Camden Town)
The Polygon The Polygon was an early housing estate, a Georgian building with 15 sides and three storeys that contained 32 houses. (Somers Town)
Tintern House, NW1 Tintern House is a block on Augustus Street (Camden Town)
Union Street, NW1 Union Street was absorbed into Stibbington Street which itself became part of Chalton Street (Somers Town)
Unity Mews, NW1 Unity Mews is a cul-de-sac off Chalton Road’s northern section near Goldington Crescent (Somers Town)
Varndell Street, NW1 Varndell Street is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Walker House, NW1 Walker House is a building on Unnamed Road (Somers Town)
Watford Street, NW1 Watford Street was cleared away in the 1860s to make way to St Pancras station (St Pancras)
Wellesley House, NW1 Wellesley House can be found on Wellesley Place (Euston)
Werrington Street, NW1 Werrington Street was an incorporation of Clarendon Street and the west side of Clarendon Square (Somers Town)
Whittlebury Street, NW1 Whittlebury Street once laid to the west of Euston station (Euston)
Wilsted Street, NW1 Wilsted Street was the original name for the lower end of Ossulston Street (St Pancras)
Windsor House, NW1 Windsor House is a block on Cumberland Market (Euston)
Wolcot House, NW1 Wolcot House is a block on Werrington Street (Somers Town)


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