Showing posts with label Lancaster Gate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lancaster Gate. Show all posts

Monday, April 28, 2025

Meath Memorial, Christ Church & the Memorial Cross, Lancaster Gate

Christ Church spire and Memorial Cross

Lancaster Gate

The square at Lancaster Gate is the focal point of a large residential estate, laid out in the late 1860s by the speculative developer Henry de Bruno Austin. The estate reputedly take sits name from the nearby north gate into Hyde Park, which honours Queen Victoria, the Duchess of Lancaster.

The square was refurbished by Westminster City Council in 2002 and creates a new setting for the restored Memorial Cross.

Bayswater Road follows the route of a Roman Road 'Via Trinobantia'. The area was predominantly farmland until the 19th century.

The botanist and playwright John Hill had his physic garden here until 1775. In 1795, the locality flourished as the Bayswater Tea Gardens, famous for its springs and salubrious air. Later, the name was changed to the Flora Tea Gardens and then Victoria Tea Gardens which finally closed in 1854 for comprehensive development.

Lancaster Gate is a fine example of a mid-Victorian London development. The layout and scale of its long imposing terraces represent Bayswater's most ambitious architectural achievement.

The Grade II listed stuccoed terraces are richly ornamented with classical porticoes, colonnaded balconies and console cornicing.. The terraces south of Lancaster Gate are the work of architect Sancton Wood. Those to the north, adjacent to the former Christ Church, are the work of architect John Johnson.

Meath Memorial

Meath Memorial

The monument at the junction with Bayswater Road is the Meath Memorial.

The memorial was designed by Hermon Cawthra RA and commemorates Reginald Brabazon, 12th Earl of Meath (1841-1929). It was unveiled in 1934. The Earl of Meath was actively engaged in social and philanthropic work. He was the first chairman of the Young Men's Friendly Society, first President of the British College of Physical Education, and founder and first President of the Lad's Drill Association.

Lord Meath was also the first chairman of both the London County Council Parks Committee and the Metropolitan Public Gardens Association.

Steps in the memorial lead to a tall pedestal with a portrait medallion together with a domed top surmounted by the figure of a seated boy.

The monument is Grade II listed.

Tuesday, March 04, 2025

Walking with friends: Swiss Cottage to Portobello Road Market... and beyond

The statue of 'Sound'

Friday February 28, 2025.

As my friend Steve and I both had the day off from work, Steve had been off all week, we decided that a trip to London was in order.

We began our trip at Watford Metropolitan line station, boarding a train to Baker Street. We changed at Finchley Road and took a Jubilee line train the one stop to Swiss Cottage, from where our walk would begin.

Swiss Cottage pub

On leaving the station we found ourselves directly outside the Swiss Cottage public house, which had permanently closed at the beginning of the month. After taking a few photos we headed south, along Finchley Road, passing the former Marlborough Road underground station, before we reached St John's Wood station. 

From here we headed southwest, along Grove End Road, Hall Road, Sutherland Avenue and Warrington Crescent and the Warrington Hotel. Although the pub was closed we could see the splendid interior, through the windows, promising to visit on another occasion.

Warwick Avenue Cabmen Shelter

Warwick Avenue and its Cabmen's Shelter was next, before Clifton Villas and Bloomfield Road brought us to Little Venice, where we crossed over the Grand Junction Canal and continued along Westbourne Terrace Road, using Westbourne Bridge to traverse the railway lines coming out of Paddington station. 

Lancaster Gate Memorial Cross

Westbourne Terrace brought us to Bayswater Road, where we paused at Lancaster Gate, before continuing west, eventually stopping for a coffee at Cafe Diana.

Suitably refreshed we continued our stroll by heading north, along Pembridge Road, until we reached Portobello Road and joined the throng of tourists and shoppers heading to the market.

Alice's Antique Shop

Steve had not visited the market before, and it had been a good few years since my last visit, so we checked out the shops, stalls, indoor markets trying to spot a deal. I bought some gifts for the girls, before we stopped at a food van for some well deserved lunch. 

Portobello Road Market

We then continued up through the rest of the Portobello Road Market, until we turned westward, along Cambridge Gardens, walking almost below Westway.

Thursday, December 20, 2018

Italian Gardens

London The Unfinished City
A little piece of Italy in the heart of London.

With so much to see in Kensington Park, I had to separate the various parts into individual posts.

The Italian Gardens are a wonderfully peaceful place to take a break, considering how close they are to the Bayswater Road. With gently sloping, tree-covered greens, on either side, offering shade, a Pump House with seating and fountains that keep the heat down, you can quite easily forget that you are in the heart of London.