Fareham Street
This street was originally called Titchfield
Street, after one of the subsidiary titles of the
Dukes of Portland. It was renamed Fareham
Street in 1950, the past and present names being
those of adjoining villages in Hampshire.
The street was laid out in 1736 (ref. 163) between
Dean Street and Great Chapel Street, on vacant
or undeveloped land. (ref. 140) Between January 1736/7
and April 1738 the second Duke of Portland
granted building leases of four sites on the north
side of the newly laid-out street and five sites on
the south side. All the leases were subject to
rents of £6 per annum, without payment of fines,
and all were to expire in 1799. John Jackson of
St. Anne's, carpenter, took the lease of the site
on the north side at the corner of Great Chapel
Street. The other eight sites were leased to
Joseph Wayte, also of St. Anne's, carpenter. (ref. 140)
John Morris of Walham Green, brickmaker,
and John Montigny of St. George's, Hanover
Square, blacksmith, probably supplied some of the
building materials. (ref. 164)
The erection of the first houses in Titchfield
Street began in 1737, a date formerly commemorated by a plaque let into the wall of the house at the
corner with Dean Street. (ref. 165) Titchfield Street
first appears by name in the parish ratebooks in
1739 when four of the new houses were occupied,
but it was not until 1743 that all the houses were
rated. (ref. 29)
References
| 163. |
Ibid., 1737/3/121. |
| 140. |
Nottingham University, Portland MSS., Soho
lease book. |
| 164. |
Ibid., 1738/1/241; 1738/2/46. |
| 165. |
Notes and Queries, eighth series, vol. v, 1894, p. 43. |
| 29. |
R.B. |