The Cecil Estate
The property owned by the Cecil family on the
north side of the Strand was acquired by Sir
William Cecil in the second half of the sixteenth
century, partly from the second Earl of Bedford (ref. 99)
and partly from other sources. (ref. 100) It lay between
a row of houses belonging to the Earls of Bedford
(on part of the site of Friars Pyes) on the west and
the White Hart Inn, which was owned by Brasenose College, Oxford, on the east. One of the
houses acquired by Cecil was enlarged for his own
occupation, and a smaller dwelling house was
added on its east side for the use of his second son,
Sir Robert Cecil. (ref. 101) After Sir William's elevation
to the peerage Cecil House became known as
Burleigh or Burghley House, and subsequently,
when his elder son Thomas became Earl of
Exeter, as Exeter House.
In 1671, whilst negotiations were in progress
for the making of Catherine Street on the site of
the White Hart (see page 35), John, Lord
Burghley, son of the fourth Earl of Exeter,
petitioned the King for a licence to build over the
site of Exeter and Little Exeter House. His
scheme (Plate 10) provided for an east-west
street parallel with the Strand and linked to it
by two north-south streets, one of which was
intended to communicate northwards with
Charles Street. This plan was approved and a
licence was granted to Lord Burghley in 1673. (ref. 102)
The main east-west street was built and called
Exeter Street, but only one of the two north-south streets was made, and is now the southern
arm of Burleigh Street. The other intended
communication between Charles Street and the
Strand was not built in 1673, probably because of
the resistance offered by the fifth Earl of Bedford
(see pages 35–6). It was eventually made by the
Commissioners of Woods, Forests and Land
Revenues in 1833–5 and called Wellington
Street.
References
| 99. |
P.R.O., C 54/571, no. 30; E/BER, Muniment of Title, Middlesex, bundle E, nos. 1–3; Northamptonshire Record Office, Burghley House MSS., 5/21. |
| 100. |
Burghley House MSS., 5/19, 25/1. |
| 101. |
Hatfield House, Cecil Family and Estate Papers, deed 184/5. |
| 102. |
Burghely House MSS., 13/1. |