No. 13 Soho Square
The early history of the house on this site and
of its rebuilding in 1768–9 has been described
above with that of No. 12. Lady Coney was
living here from at least 1691 to 1692, and Sir
Isaac Reboe (or Rebow) from 1696 to at least
1703. Other inhabitants include Sir Comport
Fytche, second baronet, 1706–12; Sir Edmund
Anderson, fifth baronet, 1713–17; George
Mackenzie, third Earl of Cromarty, Jacobite,
1716–60; Colonel Hewitt, 1773–5, and (Sir)
George Tuthill, physician, who gave public
lectures in the house, 1811–21. (ref. 94)
The stucco facing to the front of this house is
mid nineteenth-century work of a similar character to No. 12. Internally, the house differs from
No. 12 in being entered from the square and in
having a bay window at the rear, but there is again
a square stone staircase in the centre and both this
and its good wrought-iron balustrade have been
little altered (Plate 127b). The stair rises only
to the second-floor level, which is marked by a
decorated band. A small enclosed wooden staircase gives access to the floor above and this has a
gallery to the main stair compartment, which is
finished with a modillion cornice and plain ceiling,
the roof light having a frieze of festoons and
roundels. Some altered late seventeenth-century
balustrading, with panelled newels and twisted
balusters, has been re-used above the staircase to
the basement. As in No. 12, a decorated plaster
ceiling survives in the first-floor rear room, the
ornament awkwardly contained in its rectangular
panel (Plate 131a). In this room, in the one below
and in the front room on the first floor, there
are enriched modillion cornices and in both
first-floor rooms some wide and narrow wooden
panelling survives. Due to extensive alterations
and partitioning, no room in the house now gives
any clear idea of its eighteenth-century appearance.

Figure 10:
Nos. 12 and 13 Soho Square, plans
References
| 94. |
R.B.; G.L.C. print collection. |