Chepstow Villas, W11

Road in/near Notting Hill, existing between the 1850s and now

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(51.51322 -0.19934, 51.513 -0.199) 
MAP YEAR:18001810182018301860190019502025 
 
Road · * · W11 ·
JUNE
8
2015
Chepstow Villas is a road in W11 with a chequered history.

Chepstow Villas is a pleasant leafy street that runs between Pembridge Villas and Kensington Park Road. It is intersected by Ledbury Road/Chepstow Crescent; Denbury Road/Pembridge Crescent; and Portobello Road.

Until the 1840s, the whole area was agricultural land. But in around 1840 the demand for housing began to increase and the second great surge of housebuilding began on the Ladbroke estate. The Ladbroke family, the owners of the estate, had begun to sell off parcels of land to speculators. James Weller Ladbroke retained the eastern part of what is now Chepstow Villas (numbers 1-15 odds and 2-32 evens), but the central part, up as far as Portobello Road, passed into the ownership of Robert Hall of Old Bond Street. And after James Weller Ladbroke’s death in 1847, his heir Felix Ladbroke sold the western plot to a speculating parson from Bedfordshire, the Rev. Brooke Edward Bridges, and the latter then sold it on to another developer, Thomas Pocock. So there were a number of different landowners involved in the development of Chepstow Villas.

During the second half of the 1840s and the early 1850s, the street was laid out and development proceeded apace on all three parts of Chepstow Villas, as well as in neighbouring streets. The landowners signed agreements with a number of developers, who each undertook to build a certain number of houses. Many of the developers were professional builders, but there were also gentlemen and tradesmen interested in property speculation who then employed their own builders. Once the houses were built, the landowner would give 99-year leases of the houses to the developer in exchange for an annual ground rent. The developer would then sublet the individual houses in order to recover his investment. There are records of the dates on which the individual leases were granted, and from these one can work out when the houses were built. Although the landowners exercised some control over what houses were built, much was left to the individual developers, which explains the variety of styles to be found in the street.

One of the main developers, with whom both James Weller Ladbroke and Robert Hall signed agreements, was a civil engineer called William Henry Jenkins who hailed from Herefordshire on the Welsh borders. It was he who appears to decided the names for the new streets, choosing the names of places near his home – Chepstow, Denbigh, Ledbury and Pembridge.

The road started to decline around the turn of the twentieth century.

During the Blitz in the autumn of 1940, a number of bombs fell on Chepstow Villas, mostly causing only minor damage to roads and gardens. But an incendiary bomb on 15 October 1940 damaged the top floor of No. 46; and on 8 December 1940 Nos. 19 and 20 were damaged and two people had to be evacuated, according to air wardens’ reports.

In the 1960s and 1970s, Chepstow Villas began a steady ascent to renewed fashionability. An early sign came in the mid-1960s, when the Conservative MP Julian Critchley (1930-2000) moved into the detached villa at No. 50. He was shortly joined by his friend and fellow politician Michael Heseltine, who kept the house until the mid 1970s. By that time the street had become quite sought after, and Heseltine sold the house to a Saudi princess. She did not move in immediately, and the house (by then valued at some £200,000) became the subject of a famous squatting case. A group of squatters called “Mustard” or Multiracial union of Squatters to alleviate Racial Discrimination” moved into the house, announcing that they proposed to stay there until the owner was ready to move in. The Saudi princess finally obtained an eviction order in 1976.
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CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LOCALITY

Comment
EMC   
Added: 10 Jul 2023 22:35 GMT   

Ossington Street, W8
correcting the date on my existing comment

Source: Paddington: Bayswater | British History Online

Reply

Ken Herlingshaw   
Added: 17 Jun 2023 18:34 GMT   

St John the Evangelist - Spire
The top of the church spire fell off during WW2 (presumably during a bombing raid ?) and for many years after that the spire had a flat top.
I don’t know when it was restored.
Definitely not in the early fifties when I went to Sunday School there.

Reply
Comment
EMC   
Added: 10 Jul 2023 22:31 GMT   

Correction re Ossington Street
In the Wikipedia date of 1837 for the renaming of Victoria Grove as Ossington Street, the two last figures appear to have been transposed from the likely source, London County Council, Names of Streets (1905) quoted in T F T Baker, Diane K Bolton and Patricia E C Croot, ’Paddington: Bayswater’, in A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9, Hampstead, Paddington, ed. C R Elrington (London, 1989), pp. 204-212. British History Online ptth;:’www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol9/pp204-212 [accessed 10 July 2023]. "During the 1830s Victoria Grove (renamed Ossington Street in 1873) (fn. 48) was laid out from the Uxbridge road close to the boundary, on part of Gravel Pit field." This makes sense, as John Evelyn Denison, a former Speaker of the House of Commons, was created 1st Viscount Ossington in 1873.

Source: Paddington: Bayswater | British History Online

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LATEST LONDON-WIDE CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE PROJECT


   
Added: 9 Jan 2025 18:51 GMT   

Parkers Row, SE1
My great great grandmother, and her soon to be husband, lived in Parker’s Row before their marriage in St James in June 1839. Thier names were - Jane Elizabeth Turner and Charles Frederick Dean. She was a hat trimmer and he was a tailor.

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Comment
Lindsay Trott   
Added: 1 Jan 2025 17:55 GMT   

Lockside not on 1939 Register
I have the Denby family living in Lockside in 1938 but it does not appear on the 1939 Register.

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Comment
Janelle Robbins   
Added: 27 Dec 2024 18:47 GMT   

Harriet Robbins
Please get in touch re Harriet Robbins


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Comment
Dave Hinves   
Added: 27 Nov 2024 03:55 GMT   

he was a School Teacher
Henry sailed from Graves End 1849 on ’The Woodbridge’ arrived South Australia 1850. In 1858 he married Julia Ann Walsh at Burra, South Australia, they had 3 children, and 36 grand children. Died 24 June 1896 at Wilmington, South Australia. He is my 1st cousin 3x removed.

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Comment
Kevin Pont   
Added: 23 Nov 2024 17:03 GMT   

St Georges Square
This is rather lovely and well worth a visit!

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Comment
Simon Chapman   
Added: 22 Nov 2024 17:47 GMT   

Blossom Place
My Great Great Grandmother, Harriett Robbins lived in 2 Blossom Place in 1865 before marrying my Great Great Grandfather. They moved to 23 Spitall Square.

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Comment
Mark G   
Added: 26 Oct 2024 21:54 GMT   

Skidmore Street, E1
Skidmore Street was located where present day Ernest Street and Solebay Street now stand. They are both located above Shandy Street and Commodore Street.

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Alan Russell   
Added: 26 Oct 2024 14:36 GMT   

Cheshire Street, London E2 - 1969
Cheshire Street, London E2 - 1969

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NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
All Saints Notting Hill All Saints church was designed by the Victorian Gothic revival pioneer William White, who was also a mountaineer, Swedish gymnastics enthusiast and anti-shaving campaigner.
Duke of Cornwall The Duke of Cornwall pub morphed into the uber-trendy "The Ledbury" restaurant.
Horbury Chapel (Kensington Temple) In September 1849, the Horbury Chapel, Notting Hill was officially opened.
Ladbroke Square Garden Ladbroke Square communal garden lies in Notting Hill.
Mercury Theatre The Mercury Theatre was situated at 2a Ladbroke Road, next to the Kensington Temple.
Notting Hill in Bygone Days Notting Hill in Bygone Days by Florence Gladstone, was originally published in 1924 by T. Fisher Unwin.
St John’s Notting Hill St John’s Notting Hill is a Victorian Anglican church built in 1845 in Lansdowne Crescent, Notting Hill.
St John’s Hill St John’s Hill is the highest point in the area.

NEARBY STREETS
Agauana House, W11 Agauana House is located on Westbourne Grove (Notting Hill)
Alexander Mews, W2 Alexander Mews is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Archer Street, W11 Archer Street was renamed Westbourne Grove in 1938 (Notting Hill)
Artesian House, W2 Artesian House is a block on Artesian Road (Notting Hill)
Artesian Road, W2 Artesian Road lies just over the boundary into Paddington from Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Arundel Gardens, W11 Arundel Gardens was built towards the end of the development of the Ladbroke Estate, in the early 1860s (Notting Hill)
Aston House, W11 Aston House is a building on Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Beaumont House, W2 Beaumont House is a block on Prince’s Square
Berrington House, W2 Berrington House is a block on Hereford Road
Bolton Road, W11 Bolton Road was eventually replaced by the 1949-built Portobello Court Estate (Notting Hill)
Bridstow Place, W2 Bridstow Place is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Buckingham Court, W11 Buckingham Court is a block on Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Bulmer Mews, W11 Bulmer Mews is a tiny mews behind Notting Hill Gate (Notting Hill Gate)
Camelford Road, W11 Archer House is a block on Westbourne Grove (Notting Hill)
Chepstow Corner, W2 Chepstow Corner is a street in Paddington
Chepstow Court, W11 Chepstow Court is a block on Chepstow Villas (Notting Hill)
Chepstow Crescent, W11 Chepstow Crescent is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Chepstow Place, W2 Chepstow Place runs from the junction of Westbourne Grove and Pembridge Villas in the north to Pembridge Square in the south.
Chepstow Road, W2 Chepstow Road is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Chepstow Villas, W11 Chepstow Villas is a road in W11 with a chequered history (Notting Hill)
Clanricarde Gardens, W2 Clanricarde Gardens is a street of very tall, narrow houses built between 1869 and 1873 by a pair of West London builders, Thomas Good and William White. (Bayswater)
Clydesdale Road, W11 Clydesdale Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Codrington Mews, W11 This attractive L-shaped mews lies off Blenheim Crescent between Kensington Park Road and Ladbroke Grove (Notting Hill)
Colville Gardens, W11 Colville Gardens was laid out in the 1870s by the builder George Frederick Tippett, who developed much of the rest of the neighbourhood (Notting Hill)
Colville Houses, W11 Colville Houses is part of the Colville Conservation Area (Notting Hill)
Colville Mews, W11 Colville Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Colville Road, W11 Colville Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Colville Square, W11 Colville Square is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Colville Terrace, W11 Colville Terrace, W11 has strong movie connnections (Notting Hill)
Convent Gardens, W11 Convent Gardens is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Courtnell Street, W2 Courtnell Street is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Daley Thompson House, W11 Daley Thompson House is a block on Colville Square (Notting Hill)
Dawson Place, W2 Dawson Place is a street in Paddington
Denbigh Close, W11 Denbigh Close is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Denbigh Road, W11 Denbigh Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Denbigh Terrace, W11 Denbigh Terrace is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Dunworth Mews, W11 This is a street in the W11 postcode area (Notting Hill)
Evesham House, W2 Evesham House is a building on Hereford Road
Folly Mews, W11 Folly Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Garway Road, W2 Garway Road is a street in Paddington (Bayswater)
Hayden’s Place, W11 Haydens Place is a small cul-de-sac off of the Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Hedgegate Court, W11 Hedgegate Court is a block on Powis Terrace (Notting Hill)
Hereford Road, W2 Hereford Road was planned as a road of detached villas (Bayswater)
Horbury Crescent, W11 Horbury Crescent is a short half-moon shaped street between Ladbroke Road and Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Horbury Mews, W11 Horbury Mews is a T-shaped mews in Notting Hill (Notting Hill Gate)
Kensington Park Gardens, W11 Kensington Park Gardens is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Kensington Park Mews, W11 Kensington Park Mews lies off of Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Kensington Park Road, W11 Kensington Park Road is one of the main streets in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Kildare Terrace, W2 Kildare Terrace is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Ladbroke Gardens, W11 Ladbroke Gardens runs between Ladbroke Grove and Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Grove, W11 Ladbroke Grove is the main street in London W11 (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Square, W11 The huge Ladbroke Square communal garden is part communal garden accessed from the backs of the houses lining it and part traditional London Square with roads between the houses and the square. (Notting Hill)
Ladbroke Terrace, W11 Ladbroke Terrace was one of the first streets to be created on the Ladbroke estate (Notting Hill)
Lambton Place, W11 Lambton Place is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Lansdowne Walk, W11 Lansdowne Walk was named after the Lansdowne area of Cheltenham (Notting Hill)
Ledbury Mews North, W11 Ledbury Mews North is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Ledbury Mews West, W11 This is a street in the W11 postcode area (Notting Hill)
Ledbury Road, W11 Ledbury Road is split between W2 and W11, the postal line intersecting the street (Notting Hill)
Ledbury Road, W2 Ledbury Road is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Leinster Square, W2 Leinster Square, along with Prince’s Square, was begun in 1856 and finished in 1864 (Bayswater)
Linden Gardens, W11 Linden Gardens is a cul-de-sac and the first of James Ladbroke’s plots to be developed. (Notting Hill Gate)
Linden Mews, W2 Linden Mews lies off Linden Gardens (Notting Hill Gate)
Lonsdale Road, W11 Lonsdale Road is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Matlock Court, W11 Matlock Court can be found on Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Monmouth Road, W2 Monmouth Road contained cottages and semi-detached villas by 1846 (Bayswater)
Moorhouse Road, W2 Moorhouse Road is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Needham Road, W11 Needham Road was formerly Norfolk Road (Notting Hill)
Newton Mews, W2 Newton Mews is shown on the 1900 map (Bayswater)
Northumberland Place, W2 Northumberland Place is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Ossington Street, W8 Ossington Street leads from Moscow Road at its north end to the Bayswater Road at its south end (Bayswater)
Palace Court, W2 Palace Court was built in the 1880s to connect the Bayswater Road to Moscow Road (Bayswater)
Pembridge Crescent, W11 Pembridge Crescent is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pembridge Gardens, W2 Pembridge Gardens dates from the 1850s (Notting Hill Gate)
Pembridge Mews, W11 Pembridge Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pembridge Place, W2 Pembridge Place is a street in Notting Hill
Pembridge Place, W2 Pembridge Place is a road in the W2 postcode area
Pembridge Road, W2 Pembridge Road is the former southern end of Portobello Lane. (Notting Hill)
Pembridge Square, W2 Pembridge Square was developed between 1856 and 1864 (Bayswater)
Pembridge Villas, W11 Pembridge Villas is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pencombe Mews, W11 Pencombe Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Pinehurst Court, W11 Pinehurst Court is a mansion block at 1-9 Colville Gardens (Notting Hill)
Portobello Court, W11 Portobello Court is a block on Portobello Court (Notting Hill)
Portobello Road, W11 Portobello Road is internationally famous for its market (Notting Hill)
Portobello Street, W11 Bolton Road became Portobello Street in 1938 (Notting Hill)
Powis Square, W11 Powis Square is a square between Talbot Road and Colville Terrace (Notting Hill)
Prince’s Square, W2 Prince’s Square and Leinster Square are ’twin’ picturesque garden squares situated in the Bayswater area - the two squares share a street
Princes House, W11 Princes House is a block on Kensington Park Road (Notting Hill)
Princes Mews, W2 Princes Mews was laid out to provide stabling accommodation for the houses of Prince’s Square
Rede Place, W2 Rede Place is a street in Paddington
Rosehart Mews, W11 Rosehart Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Roseland Place, W11 Roseland Place was a short mews located at what is now 224/226 Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Sarum House, W11 Sarum House is a block on Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Shottsford, W2 Shottsford is one of the buildings of the Wessex Gardens Estate (Westbourne Green)
Simon Close, W11 Simon Close is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
St John’s Gardens, W11 St John’s Gardens runs around St John’s church (Notting Hill)
St John’s Mews, W11 St John’s Mews is a redeveloped mews off of Ledbury Road (Notting Hill)
Stanley Crescent, W11 Stanley Crescent was named after the noted politician Edward Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, who became Prime Minister in 1852 (Notting Hill)
Stanley Gardens Mews, W11 Stanley Gardens Mews existed between 1861 and the mid 1970s (Notting Hill)
Stanley Gardens, W11 Stanley Gardens was built in the 1850s. (Notting Hill)
Sutherland Place, W2 Sutherland Place is a street in Paddington (Westbourne Green)
Talbot Road, W11 The oldest part of Talbot Road lies in London, W11 (Notting Hill)
Talbot Road, W2 Talbot Road straddles the W2/W11 postcodes (Westbourne Green)
Thornbury Court, W11 Thornbury Court is a block on Chepstow Villas (Notting Hill)
Twisaday House, W11 Twisaday House is a block on Colville Square (Notting Hill)
United House, W11 United House is a block on Pembridge Road (Notting Hill Gate)
Vernon Yard, W11 Vernon Yard is a mews off of Portobello Road (Notting Hill)
Victoria Gardens, W11 Victoria Gardens is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill Gate)
Victoria Mews, W11 Victoria Mews is a location in London (Notting Hill Gate)
Viscount Court, W11 Viscount Court is a block on Pembridge Villas
Wellington Close, W11 Wellington Close is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Westbourne Grove Mews, W11 Westbourne Grove Mews is a street in Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Westbourne Grove, W11 Westbourne Grove is one of the main roads of Notting Hill (Notting Hill)
Westbourne Grove, W2 Westbourne Grove began its existence as a footpath (Bayswater)
Westmont Court, W2 Westmont Court is located on Monmouth Road (Bayswater)
Wilby Mews, W11 Wilby Mews was maybe named after Benjamin Wilby who was involved in several 19th century development schemes (Notting Hill)


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LOCAL PHOTOS
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Notting Hill
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Pembridge Road (1900s)
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In the neighbourhood...

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Children of Ruston Close This road was the renaming of Rillington Place. Even after renaming, this street, where notorious murders had taken place, proved too much to avoid subsequent demolition.
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Political meeting in front of the Junction Arms (1920s) The pub was situated where Tavistock Road, Crescent and Basing Road met. The banners include the National League of the Blind, the North Kensington Branch of the Street Traders Union, and the Union of General Workers Kensal Green.
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Notting Hill
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Pembridge Road (1900s)
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The Warwick Castle (1906)
Credit: Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea
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The Tabernacle is a Grade II*-listed building in Powis Square, W11 built in 1887 as a church. Photographed here in 2010.
Credit: Asteuartw
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Duke of Cornwall, Ledbury Road W11, around 1990. Later the Ledbury restaurant, holder of two Michelin Stars
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St Peter's Notting Hill
Credit: Asteuartw
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Kensington Hippodrome, about 1840, showing St John’s Hill in the background.
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Notting Hill in Bygone Days
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