CHAPTER I
Knightsbridge South Side:
East of Sloane Street
This chapter describes the strip of development between
the Lanesborough Hotel (the former St George's Hospital)
and Harvey Nichols store at the corner of Sloane Street.
The Lanesborough itself, part of Hyde Park Corner, is
excluded. Two demolished buildings of historic interest
have been dealt with which did not strictly speaking front
the road: the Knightsbridge foot-guards barracks and the
Chinese Collection exhibition hall on part of the barracks
site. Old Barrack Yard generally, however, is not included
in this account.
Before 1903 the buildings along this side of Knightsbridge (then generally called Knightsbridge Road) were
numbered under the names St George's Place and Lowndes Terrace. St George's Place extended from St George's
Hospital as far as William Street, Lowndes Terrace occupying the remainder of the frontage up to Sloane Street. (A
small part of St George's Place at its west end was known
until 1860 as Knightsbridge Terrace.) In 1903 both these
names were abolished and the buildings renumbered as
part of Knightsbridge.
Summary of development
There was very little building here before the end of the
seventeenth century. At that time a narrow roadside belt of
manorial 'waste' belonging to Westminster Abbey extended, unbroken by any turning and almost entirely unbuilt
upon, from Hyde Park Corner to the site of present-day
William Street. By the late 1660s almost all of this ground
— the future St George's Place — had come into the hands of
one man, Sir William Poultney. The only part of the road
frontage not held by him was an enclosure immediately to
the east of William Street — later occupied by Knightsbridge Terrace — which had for very many years been let by
the Abbey with a hospital or lazar-house on the north side
of the road (where the French Embassy now stands). Poultney was also the lessee of two fields — the Great and Little
Spittlefields — eastwards of the line of present-day Sloane
Street; the northern field fronted the Knightsbridge road,
where Lowndes Terrace was later built. These fields, their
name suggesting that they once belonged to the lazarhouse, had become separated from the rest of the Abbey
estate and passed into the ownership of the Crown. A
house and pleasure ground called Spring Gardens was
established here in or soon after 1670. (ref. 1)
After Poultney's death his estate was broken up. The
Crown land was assigned in 1692 to William Lowndes,
whose family subsequently obtained the freehold. The
strip of waste was surrendered by Poultney's son in 1699,
and was leased successively by the Dean and Chapter to
Henry Guy, esquire, of Tring, and Joseph Shayle, gentleman, of St James's. A small portion at the east end was
leased in 1718 to John Clark(e) of St James's, baker, who
soon afterwards acquired much of the frontage on the
north side of the road (roughly the area now occupied by
Bowater House and the properties eastwards as far as
Albert Gate). (ref. 2)
These changes in ownership were accompanied or soon
followed by changes on the ground. In 1691 there had been
only two houses on the Poultneys' Abbey land (both near
Hyde Park Corner), but within thirty years it had been
more or less completely built up. William Penn is said to
have lived in a house here (later No. 8 St George's Place) for
a time until 1706. (ref. 3) Lanesborough House was built about
1718, and houses and a brewhouse were built on the enclosure belonging to the lazar-house at about the same time. (ref. 4)
The ribbon of new building eventually acquired the name
St George's Place, presumably after St George's Hospital,
founded in 1733 at Lanesborough House (but also reflecting the fact that it lay in the parish of St George, Hanover
Square). Further building and some rebuilding occurred
throughout the rest of the eighteenth century, and continued in the nineteenth.
The buildings between St George's Hospital and the
entrance to Old Barrack Yard were rebuilt in the late 1820s
with substantial houses, which attracted high-class residents. The road was at its widest here, the houses were set
well back, and there were no buildings opposite, where the
park wall ran along the roadside with no intervening verge
or waste. This redevelopment followed further changes in
landownership, with the sale by the Dean and Chapter in
1800 of the freeholds of the small estate leased by Clark in
1718 (to the then lessee, John Warner), and of much of the
adjoining ground (to the lessee, Francis Burton). (ref. 5) In the
early years of Queen Victoria's reign the occupants of the
houses here included several noblemen and MPs, and this
part of the road remained a good residential address well
into the twentieth century.
West of the entrance to Old Barrack Yard, by contrast,
the street developed a commercial character. The building
of the Knightsbridge foot-guards barracks c. 1760, on
ground belonging to the Grosvenor family immediately
south of the former waste, may have been a factor, perhaps
reducing the desirability of the houses there as residences.
Further along, the road narrowed sharply and there was
continuous building on both sides of the road as the centre
of Knightsbridge 'town' was reached, a situation perhaps
conducive to a lower class of development than that nearer
Hyde Park Corner.
When the brewhouse on the lazar-house property here
was pulled down and redeveloped by John Mayor, in 1773–
4, the new houses attracted just two 'esquires', and, for a
short time only, the Countess of Salisbury in the largest
house, at the west end of the row of eight. Her house was
subsequently occupied as a 'College for the Deaf and
Dumb' run by James Telfair (d.1796) and his son Cortez
(d.1816). By 1830 all but two houses in Knightsbridge Terrace, as 'Mayor's Row' became known, were being used as
shops or other business premises, and the countess's former house had been divided into two by 1841. In 1860
Knightsbridge Terrace was subsumed in St George's Place
(Nos 45–53). (ref. 6)
Immediately east of Wilton Place, a row of houses with
shops, Nos 28–32 St George's Place, was probably built for
Francis Burton in the mid-1820s. (ref. 7)
Also in the 1820s, pressure from development on the
estates to the south led to the creation of streets opening
into the main road: Wilton Place, running north from
Wilton Crescent on the Grosvenor estate, and William
Street and Charles (now Seville) Street on the Lowndes
estate (the Spring Gardens site), as the northern approaches to Lowndes Square. Even so, there was a general disjunction between the development of the ground alongside
the main road and that of the backland, which remains
obvious today, notably in the way Kinnerton Street stops
short where it joins Duplex Ride, and in the absence of any
street turnings (other than Old Barrack Yard) between
Hyde Park Corner and Wilton Place (figs 4, 6).
With the building up of the Lowndes estate Spring
Gardens finally disappeared; with them, too, went the
floorcloth factory established here in the middle of the
eighteenth century by the wallpaper makers Crompton
and Spinnage. The new buildings on the estate fronting
Knightsbridge, comprising Lowndes Terrace, were again
all shops.
The closure in the mid–1830s of the foot-guards barracks (latterly a depot only) did not lead immediately to any
great redevelopment, largely, no doubt, because the site
had no frontage to the main road. It did, however, provide
an opportunity for the erection of a gallery for displaying
the celebrated Chinese Collection. This was the first of
several exhibition venues in Knightsbridge (among which
may be included the Crystal Palace itself).
More shops were built on Burton's property (by then in
the ownership of O. B. Cole) in the later 1840s and '50s, and
the White Horse inn, on the corner of the entrance to Old
Barrack Yard, was rebuilt as an up-market hotel.
The businesses in this part of Knightsbridge included
hatters, tailors, dressmakers, upholsterers and jewellers.
Drapery emerged as the predominant trade. Many, perhaps most, of these shops were of good class, and between
William Street and Sloane Street there ultimately grew up
two of the great London emporia, Woollands and Harvey
Nichols, both originally small drapery shops.
No. 32 St George's Place (later No. 53 Knightsbridge),
with a columned shop–front on the corner of Wilton Place,
was a chemist's throughout its existence; the business itself
dated back to the 1830s. Another long-lasting business was
the English and Foreign Library, run here from 1849 by
Charles Westerton, previously of Park Side, at No. 20 (later
renumbered 27) St George's Place. This was set up to supply 'all classes of Readers . . . and at such a Low Subscription as to make it thoroughly a popular Establishment'.
The annual fee was one guinea and by the late 1850s some
125,000 volumes were available. Later Bolton's Library
was established further west at Nos 39–40 St George's
Place. Both businesses survived well into the twentieth
century, Bolton's latterly at No. 81 Knightsbridge. (ref. 8)
None of the houses built along the south side in the early
nineteenth century was of special architectural interest.
Nos 7–13 Knightsbridge (formerly Nos 4–7 St George's
Place), built by William Cubitt in 1828–9 for Matthew
Kinsey of Oxford Street, calico-printer, were much taller
than their neighbours but of conventional design, with
stuccoed ground-floor fronts and Doric porches (Plates
9b, 9c, 12a). (ref. 9) Lowndes Terrace, again of the 1820s, was also
unexceptional. The most ambitious redevelopment architecturally took place in the 1850s, on the Cole estate (at the
site now largely occupied by No. 27 Knightsbridge). This
was a terrace with a splendid palace façade, designed by
Frederick Robert Beeston senior (described below).
None of this, or any earlier building fabric, remains. Most
of the old buildings which survived the piecemeal redevelopment of the nineteenth century were destroyed early in
the twentieth, when all the houses and shops between
Wilton Place and William Street were pulled down for
road-widening (and replaced by the present shops, offices
and flats). Beeston's terrace was wrecked by bombing in the
Second World War. Since the war many houses have been
pulled down for redevelopment: the last of the 1820s houses
near St George's Hospital was demolished in 1991. A pair
of large houses erected in 1870–1, Nos 15 and 17 Knightsbridge, are the oldest surviving buildings.
The decline of this part of Knightsbridge as a residential
street did not begin until the First World War, but the
arrival of the underground railway in the 1900s and the
growth of heavy motor traffic were already undermining its
desirability. By the late 1920s several houses had passed
into institutional or commercial use, and some were divided into flats and offices. Adams, Holden & Pearson,
architects to St George's Hospital, had offices at No. 9
Knightsbridge in the 1920s and '30s, while No. 25 became
a foreign legation and then the premises of the furniture
makers Betty Joel Ltd. No. 1 Knightsbridge had always
been in the occupation of the hospital, having been built
about 1828 for the accommodation of the chaplain and
other staff, and rebuilt on a much larger scale in the 1860s.
In time Nos 3–9 were all occupied by departments of the
hospital, and by the end of the Second World War only
one house between the hospital and Old Barrack Yard
remained a private residence: No. 19, occupied by
Brig—Gen. Sir George Cockerill. (ref. 10)

Figure 2:
Knightsbridge, south side, Hyde Park Corner to Wilton Place in 1869: Nos 1–32 St George's Place
Today, the south side of Knightsbridge as far west as
Wilton Place is dominated by commercial blocks built
since the Second World War, few of them of more than
passing architectural interest. With the exception of the
1930s block at Nos 37–39 Knightsbridge, all the buildings
between Old Barrack Yard and Wilton Place were cleared
for redevelopment in the 1960s. Further west, Knightsbridge retains much of its early-twentieth-century character, both architecturally and as a high-class shopping
street.