Hampstead Road, NW1

Road in/near Euston, existing until now

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(51.52976 -0.13868, 51.529 -0.138) 
MAP YEAR:18001810182018301860190019502025 
 
Road · * · NW1 ·
December
3
2020
Hampstead Road connects the Euston Road with Camden.

There was until the reign of William IV, a rustic corner of the outskirts of London between King’s Cross and St John’s Wood.

The prætorium of one Roman camp was visible where Barnsbury Terrace is now and the remains of another were situated opposite old St Pancras Church. Herds of cattle grazed at Rhodes Farm near where Euston station is now. In 1707 there were no streets west of Tottenham Court Road and one cluster of houses only, besides the ’Spring Water House’ nearly half a century later, at which time what is now the Euston Road was still part of an expanse of verdant fields.

In the reign of George IV, as Samuel Palmer writes in his History of St. Pancras: "the rural lanes, hedge side roads, and lovely fields made Camden Town the constant resort of those who, busily engaged during the day in the bustle of . . . London, sought its quietude and fresh air to re-invigorate their spirits. Then the old ’Mother Red Cap’ was the evening resort of worn-out Londoners, and many a happy evening was spent in the green fields round about the old wayside house by the children of the poorer classes. At that time the Dairy, at the junction of the Hampstead Road and Kentish Town Road, was a rural cottage, furnished with forms and benches for the pedestrians to rest upon the road-side, whilst its master and mistress served out milk fresh from the cow to all who came."

The Euston Road (New Road) was at the time of its formation in the eighteenth century, the boundary line for limiting the ’ruinous rage for building’ on the north side of London. It was made by virtue of an Act of Parliament passed in the reign of George II (1756), after the strong objections of the Duke of Bedford, who opposed its construction on the grounds of its approaching too near to Bedford House - the duke’s town mansion. The Duke of Grafton, on the other hand, strenuously supported it, and after a fierce legal battle it was ultimately decided that the road should be formed.

In the Gentleman’s Magazine for 1755 there is a ground plan of the New Road, from Islington to Edgware Road, showing the then state of the ground (and the names of the proprietors) between Oxford Street and the New Road. The Act of Parliament for the formation of this great thoroughfare directed that no building should be erected ’within fifty feet of the New Road.’



Rhodes Farm stood beside Hampstead Road near the current Euston station site
(click image to enlarge)


In Gwynn’s London Improved published in the first decade of the 1800s, it is stated that "the present mean appearance of the backs of the houses and hovels have rendered this approach to the capital a scene of confusion and deformity, extremely unbecoming the character of a great and opulent city." Gwynn’s remarks applied aptly to the quarter of a mile of the New Road which lies between Gower Street North, where the old Westgate Turnpike formerly stood, and the eastern entrance to Regent’s Park. Here the road was narrow, and perpetually obstructed by wagons. The New Road between Battle Bridge (King’s Cross) to Tottenham Court Road was considered unsafe after dark. Parties would "collect at stated points to take the chance of the escort of the watchman in his half-hourly round."

In course of time, an improvement was made and that part of the road was widened by the removal of some obtruding houses, and the thoroughfare made as nearly as possible of one uniform width all along, with the exception of the hundred yards immediately to the west and east of the Adam and Eve at the junction of the Euston Road, Hampstead Road and Tottenham Court Road.

After constructing the Metropolitan Railway before 1863 using ’cut and cover’, the railway company re-made the roadway.

At the corner of the Euston Road and Hampstead Road was a public house. Nearly on the site of what is now Tolmers Square, was a reservoir of the New River Company, surrounded with a grove of trees - removed around 1860.

The Adam and Eve as late as 1832 was quite a rural inn, only one storey in height, ’with spacious gardens at the side and in the rear, a fore-court with large timber trees, and tables and benches for out-door customers. In the gardens were fruit-trees and bowers and arbours for tea-drinking parties. In the rear there were no houses at all; now there is a town.’

An advertisement in September 1718, tells us how that "there is a strange and wonderful fruit growing at the ’Adam and Eve,’ at Tottenham Court, called a ’Calabath’, which is five feet and a half round, where any person may see the same gratis."

The rural nature of the neighbourhood of the Adam and Eve can be seen from an advert which appeared in 1708:—"At Tottenham Court, near St. Giles’s, and within less than a mile of London, a very good Farm House, with outhouses and above seventy acres of extraordinary good pastures and meadows, with all conveniences proper for a cowman, are to be let, together or in parcels, and there is dung ready to lay on. Enquire further at Mr. Bolton’s, at the sign of the ’Crown,’ in Tottenham Court aforesaid, or at ’Landon’s Coffee House,’ over against Somerset House, Strand."

The first street to the north of the "Adam and Eve" in the Hampstead Road became called Eden Street - now gone.

The streets on the west side on Hampstead Road are mostly named after the first names of the family of the owner of the land, such as Henry, Charles, Frederick, William, Robert, and Edward Streets.

Henry Street became Brock Street. Charles Street disappeared when Drummond Street’s name was extended westwards. Frederick Street became William Road and Edward Street: Varndell Street. Each of these streets cross at right angles with a broader thoroughfare called Stanhope Street, which ran parallel with the Hampstead Road.

At the corner of Charles Street (formerly Sol’s Row) was the Sol’s Arms which is immortalised by Dickens in "Bleak House." It derives its name from the Sol’s Society, an institution which was conducted somewhat upon the principles of freemasonry. They used to hold their meetings at the "Queen of Bohemia’s Head," in Drury Lane; but on the pulling down of that house the society was dissolved. In Sol’s Row, David Wilkie, the artist, resided for some time, and there painted his Blind Fiddler.

The remaining streets on the west side of Hampstead Road have other designations: Rutland Street, Granby Street and Mornington Crescent, which connects the road with Camden High Street. Granby Street commemorates the English general, the Marquis of Granby. Mornington Crescent compliments the Earl of Mornington, then Governor General of India and the brother of the Duke of Wellington.

Charles Dickens, when about twelve years old, was sent to a school in Hampstead Road, close to the corner of Mornington Place and Granby Street and called Wellington House Academy. At this time Dickens was living with his parents, in "a small street leading out of Seymour Street, north of Mr. Judkin’s Chapel." Whilst here he would "ramble over the Field of the Forty Footsteps".

On the eastern side of the Hampstead Road, the Old King’s Head at the corner opposite to the Adam and Eve presented an "awkward break in the uniform width of the Euston Road", by projecting some feet beyond its neighbours, and so narrowing the thoroughfare. To the north of this tavern much of the land facing Eden Street was not built upon until about 1860. Here were large waterworks and a reservoir.

Drummond Street, the next road to the north, extends along by the front of Euston station. This street crosses George Street, which runs from Gower Street to Hampstead Road. Between George Street and Cardington Street is St James’s Church, formerly a chapel of ease to the mother church of St James’s, Piccadilly.

The Russell family owned the land further to the north - the names of several of the streets and squares commemorate them and a considerable part of the district was originally called Bedford New Town.

Ampthill Square - now disappeared beneath railway tracks - was not a square but a triangle. It was named after Ampthill Park in Bedfordshire, formerly the seat of the Earls of Upper Ossory, but afterwards the property of the ducal house of Bedford, to whom the land about this part belonged.

Harrington Square faces two sides of a triangular plot of ground, facing Mornington Crescent called after the Earl of Harrington, one of whose daughters married the seventh Duke of Bedford.



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Main source: Euston Road and Hampstead Road | British History Online
Further citations and sources



NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
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.
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.
St James Gardens St James Gardens were used as a burial ground between 1790 and 1853.

NEARBY STREETS
Albany House, NW1 Albany House is a block on Cumberland Place (Camden Town)
Albany Street, NW1 Albany Street runs from Marylebone Road to Gloucester Gate following the east side of Regent’s Park. (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)
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)
Bentham House, WC1H Bentham House is sited on Endsleigh Gardens (Bloomsbury)
Bentley House, NW1 Bentley House is a block on Euston Road (Euston Square)
Bridgeway Street, NW1 Bridgeway Street was a new 1937 name for Bridgewater Street (Somers Town)
Bucklebury House, NW1 Bucklebury House is a block on Stanhope Street (Euston)
Camberley House, NW1 Camberley House is a block on Redhill Street (Camden Town)
Cambridge Gate Mews, NW1 Cambridge Gate Mews is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Cambridge Gate, NW1 Cambridge Gate was built between 1876 and 1880 by Archer and Green (Regent’s Park)
Cambridge Terrace Mews, NW1 Cambridge Terrace Mews is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Cambridge Terrace, NW1 Cambridge Terrace is a crescent off of the Outer Circle (Regent’s Park)
Cardington Street, NW1 Cardington Street is a rare London street in that it closed for good as late as 2017 (Euston)
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)
Chester Close North, NW1 Chester Close North is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Chester Close South, NW1 Chester Close South is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Chester Court, NW1 Chester Court is sited on Albany Street (Euston)
Chester Gate, NW1 Chester Gate is a street in Camden Town (Regent’s Park)
Chester Terrace Mews, NW1 Chester Terrace Mews was a short-lived name for an area redeveloped after the Second World War (Euston)
Chester Terrace Mews, NW1 Chester Mews was renamed Chester Terrace Mews after 1938 (Euston)
Chester Terrace, NW1 Chester Terrace is the longest unbroken facade of the neo-classical terraces in Regent's Park (Camden Town)
Clarence Gardens, NW1 Clarence Gardens is a road in the NW1 postcode area (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)
Cobourg Street, NW1 Cobourg Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston Square)
Cranleigh Street, NW1 Cranleigh Street was named in connection with the Barons Ossulston peerage (Somers Town)
Cumberland Market, NW1 Cumberland Market is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Cumberland Terrace, NW1 Cumberland Terrace is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Camden Town)
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)
Drayton House, WC1H Drayton House is sited on Gordon Street (Euston Square)
Drummond Crescent, NW1 Drummond Crescent named after Lady Caroline Drummond (Euston)
Drummond Street, NW1 Drummond Street is alternatively known as ’Banglatown’, (Euston Square)
Edith Neville Cottages, NW1 Edith Neville Cottages lies between Drummond Crescent and Doric Way (Euston)
Endsleigh Gardens, WC1H Endsleigh Gardens is one of the streets of London in the WC1H postal area (Bloomsbury)
Endsleigh Street, WC1H Endsleigh Street is one of the streets of London in the WC1H postal area (Bloomsbury)
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)
Euston Road, NW1 Euston Road runs from Marylebone Road to King's Cross. The road is part of the London Inner Ring Road and forms part of the London congestion charge zone boundary (Euston Square)
Euston Square, NW1 This is a street in the NW1 postcode area (St Pancras)
Euston Street, NW1 Euston Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston Square)
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)
Everton Buildings, NW1 Everton Buildings is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Foundry Mews, NW1 Foundry Mews is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston Square)
Gardner House, NW1 Gardner House is located on Redhill Street (Camden Town)
George Mews, NW1 George Mews lies within the NW1 postcode (Euston)
Gideon Schreier House, WC1H Gideon Schreier House is a block on Endsleigh Street (Bloomsbury)
Gladwin House, NW1 Gladwin House is a block on Cranleigh Street (Somers Town)
Goldsmiths House, NW1 Goldsmiths House is a block on Augustus Street (Camden Town)
Grafton Place, NW1 Grafton Place originally formed part of the Duke of Grafton’s FitzRoy Estate (Euston)
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 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)
Lancing Street, NW1 Lancing Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Laxton Place, NW1 Laxton Place 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)
Melton Street, NW1 Melton Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston Square)
Munster Square, NW1 Munster Square is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Nash Street, NW1 Nash Street is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Netley Street, NW1 Netley Street was formerly called William Street (Euston)
North Gower Street, NW1 North Gower Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston Square)
Oakshott Court, NW1 Oakshott Court was built in 1974 (Somers Town)
Osnaburgh Street, NW1 Osnaburgh Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
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)
Prankerd House, NW1 Prankerd House is a block on North Gower Street (Euston Square)
Prince Of Wales Passage, NW1 Prince Of Wales Passage is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Prince Regent Mews, NW1 Prince Regent Mews is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Quantum House, NW1 Quantum House is a block on Euston Street (Euston Square)
Redhill Street, NW1 Redhill Street is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Regnart Buildings, NW1 Regnart Buildings may date from the 1810s decade (Euston Square)
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)
Schafer House, NW1 Schafer House is a building on William Road (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 Mary Magdalene Church, NW1 St Mary Magdalene Church is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
St Richard’s House, NW1 St Richard’s House is a block on Eversholt Street (Somers Town)
Stanhope Apartments, NW1 Stanhope Apartments is sited on Stanhope Street (Euston)
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)
Starcross Street, NW1 Starcross Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Stephenson House, NW1 Stephenson House is a block on Hampstead Road (Euston)
Stephenson Way, NW1 Stephenson Way is a street in Camden Town (Euston Square)
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)
Taviton Street, WC1H Taviton Street is one of the streets of London in the WC1H postal area (Bloomsbury)
The Polygon The Polygon was an early housing estate, a Georgian building with 15 sides and three storeys that contained 32 houses. (Somers Town)
The Wellcome Building, NW1 The Wellcome Building is a block on Euston Road (Bloomsbury)
Tintern House, NW1 Tintern House is a block on Augustus Street (Camden Town)
Tolmers Square, NW1 Tolmers Square roughly covers the site of a reservoir of the New River Company (Euston Square)
Union Street, NW1 Union Street was absorbed into Stibbington Street which itself became part of Chalton Street (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)
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)
William Road, NW1 William Road dates from 1799 or before (Euston)
William Street, NW1 William Street appears on the 1860 map west of Hampstead Road (Euston)
Winchester Apartments, NW1 Winchester Apartments is located on William Road (Euston)
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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