No. 76 Dean Street
For the building of this house see the table on
page 250. Although altered it retains much of
its original imposing aspect (Plates 102, 103b,
108, 109, 110, figs. 57–59). The first occupant entered
in the parish ratebooks was James Hamilton,
seventh Earl of Abercorn, a Fellow of the Royal
Society and author of a work on magnetism. His
name occurs, evidently as tenant of the builder,
Thomas Richmond, from 1735 until 1742,
when he removed to Cavendish Square. (ref. 179) It is
possible, however, that an occasional occupant
was, as Mr. Christopher Hussey has suggested,
the Earl's second son, the Hon. John Hamilton. (ref. 180)
This spirited and capable naval officer was promoted lieutenant in March 1735/6, and distinguished himself later that year at the wreck of the
Louisa. He was appointed captain of the Deal
Castle in 1741 and of the Kinsale in 1742. His
profession probably explains the presence of an
eighteenth-century battleship among the fantastic seascapes painted on the walls of the staircase hall (Plate 108b).
Succeeding occupants of the house were Jonathan Cope, of Orton Longueville, Huntingdonshire, 1743–7; George Jennings, 1748–50; and
Edward Barker, 1751–8. From 1759 to 1770
the occupant was Judge the Hon. Henry Bathurst,
later second Earl Bathurst, before his appointment as Lord Chancellor. He was succeeded by
the Hon. Edward Stratford, Irish M.P., later
second Earl of Aldborough, 1771–4; John
Mason, 1776–9; and William Birch, 1780–97.
From 1798 to 1801 the house appears empty
in the ratebooks, although in 1799–1800 it was
intermittently occupied 'by 300 Women at work
for the Army'. (ref. 181) In August 1800 the remaining
thirty-three-year term of the lease was bought
for £850 by the united, pauper-ridden parishes
of St. Giles in the Fields and St. George, Bloomsbury, to accommodate the poor children removed
from their workhouse. (ref. 182) The parish of St. Anne
protested to the vestry of these neighbouring
parishes that the house might become 'a common
receptacle for your promiscuous poor' and threatened legal action. (ref. 183) No obstacle in law appearing,
however, the united parishes proceeded to repair
the house for their use, at a cost of £700. (ref. 184)
It was occupied from 1802 as a school of industry
for between 110 and 200 boys and girls, until
their removal in 1809 to a new building in Broad
Street (now High Holborn). (ref. 185)
In 1810 the united parishes sold the lease for
some £1,207 to Philip Rundell, (ref. 186) of the firm
of Rundell, Bridge and Rundell. Thenceforward
it was occupied together with No. 75 by that firm
of goldsmiths or its associates (see page 222). In
the years 1818–23 No. 76 is given as the address
of E. H. Baily, who was employed by the firm
as designer and modeller; and in 1824–6 as
that of William Theed, junior, who worked in
Baily's studio. (ref. 187) In 1821–4 Baily's address is
elsewhere given as No. 75. (ref. 30) Possibly his residence
was there and his studio at No. 76, where by 1833
most of the rooms of the house were used as workshops or storerooms. (ref. 27) In 1833 the freehold was
bought from the Crown for £2,000 by John
Bridge. (ref. 188)
In 1835 the premises were let to George Marley and Joseph Clark, formerly of Bear Street,
curriers and leather cutters, by whom the free
hold was bought in 1847. (ref. 189) This firm, as Joseph
Clark and Sons, still occupies the premises.

Figure 57:
No. 76 Dean Street, plans

Figure 58:
No. 76 Dean Street, elevation

Figure 59:
(facing page). No. 76 Dean Street, section
Architectural Description
Despite its past use as poorhouse and manufactory, the house, although altered, retains most
of its important internal features. With a frontage of 37 feet and an outside depth of 48 feet,
it contains a basement and four storeys, the top
being a mansard garret at the back and an attic
in front, evidently the original arrangement. A
substantial north-south wall of brickwork separates
the front range, 21 feet deep, from the back, 20
feet 6 inches deep, and each range is divided by
partitions of studwork and panelling (figs. 57, 59).
On the ground floor there are two south rooms,
each 20 feet wide, the front having two windows
to the street, a chimney-breast centred in the
south party wall, a doorway balanced by a respond
in the north side, and a wide opening, originally
a recess, in the west side. The back room has been
altered but was generally similar to the front,
except that there was a door to the south-west
closet as well as two windows to the garden. North
of the front room is the entrance hall, 15 feet
wide, a two-storeyed compartment containing
the principal staircase. Behind this, in the back
range, is the service staircase, and, before alteration, a small back room with two windows to the
garden. The first floor has the same arrangement
except that the front room is 24 feet wide, with
three windows, and the width of the staircase
compartment is consequently reduced to 10 feet
6 inches. On the second floor there are two front
rooms, each having two windows, the south room
being 19 feet wide and the north 14 feet excluding
the cupboards flanking the chimney-breast. The
back range has the same arrangement as the floors
below.
The front is an austere design carried out in
stock bricks, originally varying in colour from
yellow to pink but now stained black, with fine
red brick dressings to the jambs and segmental
arches of the windows (Plate 102, fig. 58). In
many similar house fronts these red bricks were
also used for the plain bandcourse at first-floor
level, and for quoining the giant pilasters that
mark the party walls. Here, these features are
now finished with painted stucco, as are the plain
frieze and cornice below the attic storey. Unlike
the former No. 75, the fenestration pattern varies
with each floor. In the ground storey there are two
windows widely spaced on the south side of the
doorway, and one close by on the north. The
straight-headed doorway is dressed with a wooden
doorcase consisting of two plain-shafted pilasters
with angle-voluted Ionic capitals, supporting an
entablature having a moulded architrave, a plain
flat frieze, and a bracket-modillioned cornice
(Plate 103b). There are no perceptible signs of
there having been a pediment, as at No. 75.
The deep reveals and soffit of the opening are
wood-lined, each face having a single panel sunk
in ovolo-moulded framing, whereas the front
door has eight bold moulded-and-fielded panels
in ovolo-moulded framing. The four first-floor
windows are separated by piers of equal width,
but the second opening from the south end is
wider than the rest and its elliptically arched
head rises higher. Here the openings are dressed
with chamfer-edged rustic jambs, long and short,
rising from sills resting on paired block-brackets,
the segmental arches being finished with shaped
lintels broken by keyblocks, whereas the elliptical arch has long-and-short voussoirs. These
painted stucco dressings, despite their curiously
Vanbrughian effect, are evidently later additions.
The four second-floor windows, all of the same
size and form, are centred over the ground-storey
openings, as are the windows of the attic storey.
All the windows have sashes in concealed frames,
recessed within reveals now stuccoed. Glazingbars of the original stout section survive only in
the southern pair of attic windows; elsewhere the
sashes have bars of a lighter pattern. The front
area is guarded by the original iron railing, of plain
design except for the standards which have finials
in the form of gadrooned urns.
Before the recent formation of a lobby, the
street door opened directly to the entrance hall,
a deep oblong compartment where the principal
staircase rises in three flights (short, long, short)
against the west, north and east sides, to arrive at
a landing gallery across the south side (Plates
108b, 109a, fig. 59). This staircase, which is
4 feet 6 inches wide and of very easy ascent,
appears to be constructed of deal with a balustrade
of oak. The deep cut strings are faced with an
architrave, raking below the carved scrollbrackets that end the steps. The railing consists of
stout square-section balusters turned as fluted
Doric columns on urn bases, evenly spaced with
two to each tread, between the larger Doric
column-newels. The broad moulded handrail
begins with a generous voluted curtail and ramps
up to break over each newel. The matching dado
is formed of long panels sunk in ogee-moulded
framing, finished with a moulded rail that breaks
forward above the fluted Doric pilasters serving
as responds to the newels. To give added width,
the landing gallery is broken forward with a
quadrant curve at the head of the stair; the floor
fascia is plain but for a narrow moulding along
each edge, and the gallery railing is entirely
composed of turned balusters.
The east and south walls of the ground-floor
stage are lined with deal wainscot, comprising a
plain dado, having a moulded skirting and a
cornice-profiled rail, below tall moulded-andfielded panels set in ovolo-moulded framing. The
south wall has one wide between two narrow
panels and, at each end, a door framed by a wide
stepped architrave, eared at the head. The east
door has been altered, but the west, which is only
a respond, has six moulded-and-fielded panels.
Above each doorway the panelling is set flush
with the framing. The door and window embrasures in the east wall are finished simply with
a staff bead. In the west wall, under the landing
gallery, is a wooden archway with panelled Doric
pilasters and a moulded archivolt broken by a
corniced keyblock. Within this arch, below a
simple fanlight of radial pattern, was a sixpanelled door now replaced by one with a large
glazed panel (Plate 109a). All of this panelling
is finished with a generous box-cornice, ornamented with dentils.
Apart from the panelling just described, the
landing-gallery dado, the eared architrave of the
door to the first-floor front room, and the roundheaded architrave of the door to the secondary
staircase, the walls of the compartment are
plastered and painted in oil colours. The spandrel
shapes below the first-floor stage, now plain,
were originally decorated with painting in warm
brown tones to simulate rusticated masonry,
finishing at first-floor level with the existing deep
band imitating carved stonework. This consists
of a bold key-fret between mouldings enriched
with egg-and-dart ornament. The entire upper
stage is painted, with little finesse and with some
noticeable lapses of perspective, to represent a
loggia with fluted Corinthian columns, squareshafted and round, spaced out to frame views of
classical ruins and seascapes (Plate 108). On the
long north wall, filling the wide middle and narrow
side intercolumniations, is the scene of a harbour
with shipping, bounded on the right by a ruincrowned headland, and on the left by a high and
ruinous wall from which projects a lofty Ionic
archway. Around this are some pedestals, one still
surmounted by a bronze statue, and a confusion
of column-drums, all adding to the fantastic scene
which is fitfully lit by the sun on the horizon of a
heavily clouded sky. The ruins continue across
the west wall, dominated by a triumphal arch in
front of which stands an equestrian group on a
high pedestal. The south wall, with one wide
intercolumniation, has a single early eighteenthcentury battleship seen against a cloud-flecked
sky. Above the front-room doorway is a trompe
I'œil composition of an urn, raised on a concave
pedestal and flanked by garlands of fruits and
flowers, and similar pendants decorate the panels
flanking the window in the east wall. Finishing
the walls is an enriched entablature painted in
trompe l'œil, its frieze decorated with scroll-work
and its modillioned cornice extending over the
coved junction of the walls and ceiling. Unfortunately, the ceiling decoration was badly
damaged and has now been obliterated.
These wall decorations, though striking, have
been crudely retouched in the past, and seem
originally to have been more probably the work of
a scene-painter than a marine artist. The closest
surviving parallel is the stair compartment at the
Cowdray Club, in Cavendish Square, a much
more competently painted scheme attributed
to John De Voto by Mr. E. Croft-Murray.
Although the ground-floor rooms have been
considerably altered, particularly those at the
back, much of the original finishing remains
(fig. 59). The painted deal wainscot in the front
room is generally similar to that in the entrance
hall, but here the dado rail is enriched with
carving, as are the architraves to the two doors
in the north side, which reflects the south side of
the hall in its general scheme. The box-cornice,
too, has not only dentils but three carved mouldings. There is a marble chimneypiece of simple
design, with an architrave-surround flanked by
plain jambs below the moulded consoles that
support the cornice-shelf; the frieze and plain
central tablet are of blue-grey and yellow marble,
the rest being of veined white. The plain central
face of the chimney-breast was probably intended
to be decorated with an overmantel, but each
recessed flanking face has a narrow panel and its
return is similarly panelled. The dominating
feature of the room is the wide opening in the
west wall, framed by fluted Doric pilasters supporting a triglyphed entablature. The panelled lining
of the reveals suggests that this was originally
a recess, probably for a sideboard.
In the large back room, the deal wainscot is
simpler, the panels are plain, the door architraves
are not enriched, and the box-cornice has only
dentils and an ornamented bead below the
cymatium (Plate 110a). The chimneypiece,
however, is a fine one in the style of Kent, of
well-carved woodwork with slips of veined white
marble. The ovolo architrave, carved with scallops
and darts, is eared at the head and flanked by
inverted consoles in profile, carved with acanthus.
Smaller profile-consoles stop the frieze, which is
carved in high relief with a female head between
drapery swags and, at each end, three acanthus
buds. The cornice-shelf has dentils and egg-anddart ornament below the plain corona, and leaf
ornament on the cymatium. In this room, the
projecting face of the chimney-breast is plain, as
are the narrow flanking faces.
Apart from the temporary partitions now dividing the front room, the first-floor rooms show
surprisingly few signs of change. As is customary,
the large front room has the best panelling in the
house. The general scheme is similar to that in the
room below, but here the cornice-profiled chairrail has two carved members, and a plain frieze is
interposed between the top rail of the panelling
and the box-cornice (Plate 110c, fig. 59). This
last has its bed-mouldings elaborated with leaf
ornament, dentils, and egg-and-dart; the corona is
supported by bracket modillions, and the small
cyma-reversa above is carved with a formal leaf
ornament. Each of the three surviving doors has
six moulded-and-fielded panels set in ovolomoulded framing, and each opening is finished
with a wide stepped architrave, eared at the head,
the mouldings being enriched with carving. The
window shutters are panelled to match the doors,
but the embrasures are simply finished with a
plain staff-beading. The marble chimneypiece
is composed of a wide stepped architrave, eared
at the head and surmounted by a frieze broken
by a central tablet and stopped by moulded consoles supporting the cornice-shelf. Veined white
marble is used for all but the frieze, which is of
blue-grey and yellow marble. A mottled green
marble frames the central tablet, which is finely
carved with a representation of the Stanley legend
displayed in the Derby crest. The tablet shows the
finding of a Stanley heir in an eagle's tree-top
nest, by the distracted parents and two hunters
with gun and dogs. (fn. a) The wooden overmantel
is possibly an importation, as it does not correspond
fully with the marble chimneypiece and its fixing
lugs are visible. It is, however, a well-executed
design in the manner of Kent, with an upright
gadrooned picture-frame flanked by acanthus
pendants on plain grounds, recessed between thin
pilaster-strips ornamented with fruit-and-flower
pendants hanging from scallop-shells. The entablature frieze, which breaks forward over the
frame and the pilaster-strips, is carved with flowers,
acanthus scrolls and a Rococo shell in the centre.
A swan-necked pediment emphasizes the central
break.
As on the ground floor, the large back room on
the first floor is less elaborately finished than the
front (Plate 109c). There are no carved enrichments on the chair-rail and the door architraves, and the modillioned main cornice is
simpler. The frieze is omitted so that the panelling, which is plain and recessed in ovolo-moulded
framing, rises to the cornice. Like that in the
room below, the chimneypiece is of wood and
in the style of Kent (Plate 110d). The veined
white marble slips are framed in an ovolomoulded architrave carved with scallops and darts,
eared at the head and flanked by inverted consoles
in profile, scrolled and enriched with acanthus
leaves. The frieze of ogee profile is carved with
formal acanthus leaves, and the cornice-shelf has
an egg-and-dart ovolo below the plain corona, and
a leaf ornament on the cymatium. The south-west
closet has an angle chimneypiece and is lined with
plain ovolo-moulded panelling, finished with a
plain box-cornice.
The north-west back room is lined with plain
ovolo-moulded panelling in two heights, finished
with a moulded skirting, a moulded chair-rail,
and a plain box-cornice that has a coved soffit to
its corona (Plate 110b). The fireplace is furnished with a Kentian chimneypiece of wood,
framing marble slips and consisting of an ovolomoulded architrave carved with egg-and-dart
ornament, eared at the head and surmounted
by an enriched cornice-shelf similar to that in the
south-west room. The chimney-breast, which is
centred in the north wall, is treated with one large
panel.
The second-floor and attic rooms are reached
by the secondary staircase, which is of dog-legged
form and furnished with a railing of squaresection balusters, turned as plain Doric columns
above superimposed urns, rising from the moulded
closed strings to support a broad moulded handrail, these raking members being housed into the
plain square newels (Plate 109b). Each half
landing is set back free of the north wall and
finished with a balustrade, thus permitting the
staircase to receive daylight from the skylight
in the roof.