Chester Terrace, NW1

Road in/near Camden Town, existing between 1825 and now

 HOME  ·  ABOUT  ·  ARTICLE  ·  MARKERS OFF  ·  BLOG 
(51.52907 -0.14541, 51.529 -0.145) 
MAP YEAR:18001810182018301860190019502025 
 
Road · * · NW1 ·
MARCH
2
2016
Chester Terrace is the longest unbroken facade of the neo-classical terraces in Regent's Park.

Chester Terrace takes its name from one of the titles of George IV before he became king, Earl of Chester.

As with Cornwall Terrace and York Terrace, the architectural plans were made by John Nash but subsequently altered almost beyond recognition by Decimus Burton, who was responsible for the existing design, which was built by his father James Burton in 1825. Nash was so dissatisfied with Decimus's design that he sought the demolition and complete rebuilding of the Terrace, but in vain.

All 42 houses are Grade I listed buildings. At each end there is a Corinthian arch bearing at the top the terrace name in large lettering on a blue background, probably the largest street signs in London. Five houses are semi-detached. One of these, Nash House (3 Chester Terrace, although the main entrance is on Chester Gate), has a bust of John Nash on its west side.
...

CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LOCALITY

None so far :(
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.

Reply
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.

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

Harriet Robbins
Please get in touch re Harriet Robbins


Reply
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.

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

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

Reply
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.

Reply
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.

Reply

Alan Russell   
Added: 26 Oct 2024 14:36 GMT   

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

Reply


NEARBY LOCATIONS OF NOTE
Adam and Eve Tearooms The Adam and Eve Tearooms were a fashionable Georgian watering hole.
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.
Regent’s Place Regent’s Place is a mixed use business, retail and residential quarter on the north side of Euston Road.
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.

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)
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)
Broadwalk, NW1 Broadwalk is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Regent’s Park)
Brock Street, NW1 Brock Street was formerly called Henry Street (Euston)
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)
Centric Close, NW1 Centric Close is a street in Camden Town (Camden 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 Road, NW1 Chester Road is a road in the NW1 postcode area (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)
Church Studios, NW1 Church Studios is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Clarence Gardens, NW1 Clarence Gardens is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Compton Close, NW1 Compton Close is a street in Camden Town (Camden 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)
Drummond Street, NW1 Drummond Street is alternatively known as ’Banglatown’, (Euston Square)
Ernest Street, NW1 Ernest Street appears on the 1860 map as the name for part of Robert Street (Euston)
Euston Tower, NW1 Euston Tower is a skyscraper located at 286 Euston Road, near the intersection with Tottenham Court Road. (Euston)
Everton Buildings, NW1 Everton Buildings is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
Forge Place, NW1 Forge Place is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
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)
Goldsmiths House, NW1 Goldsmiths House is a block on Augustus Street (Camden Town)
Granby Terrace, NW1 Granby Terrace was previously called Granby Street (Camden 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 Street, NW1 Harrington Street leads north from Varndell Street (Euston)
Hopkinsons Place, NW1 Hopkinsons Place is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Hurdwick Place, NW1 Hurdwick Place is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Inner Circle, NW1 Inner Circle is a street in Camden Town (Regent’s Park)
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)
Little Albany Street, NW1 Little Albany Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Longford Street, NW1 Longford Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
Mackworth House, NW1 Mackworth House is a block on Augustus Street (Euston)
Melia White House, NW1 Melia White House is located on Albany Street (Euston)
Millbrook Place, NW1 Millbrook Place is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
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)
Osnaburgh Street, NW1 Osnaburgh Street is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
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)
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)
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)
St Andrews Place, NW1 St Andrews Place is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
St Marks Square, NW1 St Marks Square is a street in Camden Town (Regent’s Park)
St Mary Magdalene Church, NW1 St Mary Magdalene Church is a street in Camden Town (Euston)
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)
Stanley Buildings, NW1 Stanley Buildings is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Stephenson House, NW1 Stephenson House is a block on Hampstead Road (Euston)
Swallowfield, NW1 Swallowfield is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Swinley House, NW1 Swinley House is a block on Redhill Street (Camden Town)
The Broadwalk, NW1 The Broadwalk is a road in the W1K postcode area (Regent’s Park)
The Broadwalk, NW1 The Broadwalk is a road in the W1J postcode area (Regent’s Park)
Tintern House, NW1 Tintern House is a block on Augustus Street (Camden Town)
Triton Mall, NW1 Triton Mall is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Triton Square Mall, NW1 Triton Square Mall is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Troutbeck, NW1 Troutbeck is a street in Camden Town (Camden Town)
Varndell Street, NW1 Varndell Street is a road in the NW1 postcode area (Euston)
William Harvey House, NW1 William Harvey House is a block on Albany Street (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)


Click here to explore another London street
We now have 682 completed street histories and 46818 partial histories




LOCAL PHOTOS
Click here to see map view of nearby Creative Commons images
Click here to see Creative Commons images near to this postcode
Click here to see Creative Commons images tagged with this road (if applicable)
Camden Town (1920s)
TUM image id: 1557159163
Licence:
The Carreras Cigarette factory, Mornington Crescent area This started life at the Acadia Works on City Road in the 19th century. It was a small business owned by Don Jose Carreras Ferrer who sold cigarettes, cigars and snuff out of small shops. A black cat began to curl up and sleep in the window of the shop near Leicester Square in Prince’s Street and the shop became known locally as "The Black Cat Shop". After the cigarette making machine was invented, the business required a large factory and moved to Hampstead Road between 1926 and 1928. It was designed by architect brothers, Marcus and Owen Collins with George Porri as their consultant. The black cat became the company’s logo. In 1959 the company merged with Rothmans and moved to Basildon, Essex. In the early 1960s the building became offices. The Egyptian décor was stripped away and the two cat statues removed. When the building got new owners in 1996, its former grandeur was restored. The building was later called “Greater London House” having become an office building.
TUM image id: 1660650534
Licence: CC BY 2.0
St. James Gardens
Credit: Google
TUM image id: 1530005129
Licence: CC BY 2.0

In the neighbourhood...

Click an image below for a better view...
High level shot of Regents Place as seen from Great Portland Street. The photograph shows the Holy Trinity Church and Great Portland Street underground station in the foreground.
Credit: Wiki Commons/PortlandVillage
Licence: CC BY 2.0


Block of flats on the Regent’s Park Estate (2009) A large housing estate in the London Borough of Camden built after 1951, most of the estate is named after places in the Lake District such as Windermere, Cartmel and Rydal Water.
Credit: Wiki Commons/Sheila Madhvani
Licence: CC BY 2.0


The Carreras Cigarette factory, Mornington Crescent area This started life at the Acadia Works on City Road in the 19th century. It was a small business owned by Don Jose Carreras Ferrer who sold cigarettes, cigars and snuff out of small shops. A black cat began to curl up and sleep in the window of the shop near Leicester Square in Prince’s Street and the shop became known locally as "The Black Cat Shop". After the cigarette making machine was invented, the business required a large factory and moved to Hampstead Road between 1926 and 1928. It was designed by architect brothers, Marcus and Owen Collins with George Porri as their consultant. The black cat became the company’s logo. In 1959 the company merged with Rothmans and moved to Basildon, Essex. In the early 1960s the building became offices. The Egyptian décor was stripped away and the two cat statues removed. When the building got new owners in 1996, its former grandeur was restored. The building was later called “Greater London House” having become an office building.
Licence: CC BY 2.0


’The March Of The Guards To Finchley’ - outside the Adam and Eve Tea Rooms. This view north along Tottenham Court Road is roughly at the site of modern Warren Street station.
Credit: William Hogarth
Licence:


The Farthing Pye House in 1780, painted in watercolour by Thomas H. Shepherd. This morphed into the Greene Man, on the Euston Road opposite Great Portland Street station. It was called the Farthing Pye House as mutton pies could be bought there for a farthing. The pub is now owned by Greene King who changed the spelling of the sign to match their branding, when they took over the Spirit Pub Company in 2015 and retired the Taylor Walker brewery brand. In 2019, the cheapest pie on the menu was ascertained to be the Woodland Mushroom & Ale which cost £10.99. As there were 960 farthings in a pound sterling, the nominal price of a pie there has risen by a factor of over 10000.
Credit: Thomas H. Shepherd
Licence:


Camden Town, from the Hampstead Road, Marylebone (1780) This shows the fields of Rhodes Farm. later to become the site of Euston station.
Credit: Old and New London: Volume 5 (1878)
Licence:


Mornington Crescent, northwest quadrant (1904). The view includes no.31 where Spencer Gore rented a room between 1909–12.
Credit: Camden Local Studies and Archives Centre
Licence: CC BY 2.0


A 2500 pound German bomb, buried opposite University College Hospital, is about to be removed by Army sappers as people in the area are evacuated to a safe distance (1948) Metropolitan "C’ Division covered the West End. Note the ’on duty’ striped armbands and the black helmet plates (now silver). The bomb fell in 1941 near to the corner of Stanhope Street and Euston Road.
Credit: Creative Commons image from New Times Paris Bureau Collection
Licence:


Warren Mews (2022) It is a cobbled cul-de-sac approached through an entrance under a building on Warren Street, in line with Fitzroy Mews.
Credit: @sarah.tuckman
Licence:


Harrington Street about the turn of the twentieth century. This street runs parallel with Hampstead Road, one ’block’ west.
Old London postcard
Licence:




  Contact us · Copyright policy · Privacy policy

32741:21786

The time in London is 17:11