CHAPTER 21: SITE OF NO. 66, CHARING CROSS
The information that has been obtained during the preparation of
this volume has not enabled a satisfactory connection to be made between
the site of No. 66, Charing Cross, and the plots sold by George and Thomas
Cole in 1618. Two of these plots remain to be dealt with: (a) comprising
two messuages in the tenure of William Davison and John Drew, situated
between the tenement of William "Goodacre" (No. 65) on the east and
that of Richard Williams on the west, and sold to Richard Stile (fn. 1) ; (b) comprising two messuages in the tenure of Richard Williams and Richard Page,
adjoining the tenement of Davison on the east and that of Tristram Heycroft
on the west, and sold to Thomas Walton. (fn. 2) The natural interpretation of
this is that the two plots lay side by side, (a) to the east of (b). In 1634
Walton sold (fn. 3) to Francis Saunders and Jane his wife a moiety of two messuages,
obviously (b). What happened to the other moiety of (b) is not known. In
1660 Jane Saunders and her sons, Francis and George, sold (fn. 4) to William
Bell their interests in a "messuage… and a Shedd or Painthouse in the
streete before the said messuage… commonly called… the Princes Armes
or feathers… scituate… neere Charing Crosse streete… late the inheritance
of Francis Saunders (fn. 5) … as the same are now in the tenure… of Richard
Lowe victualer (fn. 6) and abut East upon a Tenemt now or late in the tenure…
of William Birch, West upon the Tenemt now or late in the tenure…
of one Richard Paulin, North upon the high streete called Charing Crosse
streete, and south uppon the Stables and buildings of Roger Higgs Inholder."
The obvious inference is that this property, formerly of Francis Saunders,
is (b). In the sale of the fee-farm rents by Gamble to Price in 1679 (a) is
said to be in the tenure of Walter "Furnside" (Furness) and (b) in that of
Widow Crawley. As will be seen from what follows, Furness was certainly
the occupier of the front portion of what was afterwards No. 66, Charing
Cross, which is thereby identified as (a), and according to all logical reasoning
(b) should be the premises to the west of No. 66. But in fact the evidence
of the ratebooks points to the house in the occupation of Lowe (b) as that
afterwards occupied by Furness. The name "Crawley" (connected with
(b)) does not appear in the ratebooks, but it will be seen below that Thomas
Crawley was in 1668 the owner of the rear portion of what was afterwards
No. 66. It therefore appears that both (a) and (b) are to be identified with
the site of No. 66, and yet it seems difficult for even two houses of the
four (supposing the other two to have been in the rear) to have occupied a
frontage of only 17 feet 8 inches. (fn. 7) It must be left to some future historian
to solve the problem.
Walter Furness is shown by the ratebooks for the first time in connection with the house on the site of No. 66 in the year 1663. (fn. 8) Like the
house on the site of No. 65, it was owned by Michepher Alphery, who left
it (fn. 9) to his nephew of the same name, and on the latter's death (if without
heirs) to Robert Alphery, of Warbours. Robert sold it (fn. 10) in 1685 to James
Alphery, from whom the property passed successively to his wife Elizabeth
and his daughter Jane. A description of the premises is contained in a
mortgage (fn. 11) dated 1st March, 1720–1, between Jane Ball, "only Daughter
and Heir of James Alphery," and James Ingram. It runs: "All that Now
Dwelling House… containing One Sellar, One Shopp with a Shedd Over
and before the same, One Entry and Yard behind the said Entry, Three
Chambers and One Garrett one over another… Commonly called… the
Feathers and Late the Cock and Bottle near Charing Cross… and Abutting
East upon a Tenement Now or Late… of Arthur Morris [see p. 136], West
upon a Tenement… of Bryan Mortimer, North upon the High Street
called Charing Cross Street, and South upon the Buildings of Roger Niggs
[Higgs], Gentleman. (fn. 12)
This was, however, only a portion of the premises. The other part had,
on 14th July, 1668, been demised to Thomas Crawley under the description
of "all that Messuage… containing one Cellar, or Citchen, three Chambers,
a Garrett and one long entry or passage leading out of the street into the
said Messuage… one little yard paved and one House of Office in the said
yard, the said Entry… then being in length from the said street fourteen
foot… and eight inches and in Breadth between wall and wall three foot…
and then divided by a wall sett up between the said Entry… and the shop
belonging to the said House wherein the said Walter Furnis then dwelt, and
the Room within the said entry… containing Twelve foot and four inches."
Walter Furness had rebuilt the premises, which had previously been called
The Whalebone, as part of his house "then called… the Windsor Castle
…now [1737] called… the Cock and Bottle." On 13th September,
1737, John Crawley (son of John, cousin of Thomas Crawley) sold (fn. 13) this
portion of the premises to Samuel Cranmer. From 1736 to 1745 the house
is shown by the ratebooks as empty, and in 1746 Robert Taylor appears.
On 4th November, 1743, Taylor had obtained leases (fn. 14) for 21 and 63 years
respectively of both portions (specified as the front and back portions) of
the house, and on the site he built a new house, the freehold of which he
subsequently purchased. (fn. 15)
On 14th March, 1808, his son, Michael Angelo Taylor, leased the
house to Louis Monnet under the description of a messuage, then in Monnet's
occupation, abutting north on the public highway opposite the King's Mews,
south on the messuage lately in the occupation of Lady Taylor but then of
Dr. Maton (see p. 134), west on a messuage in the occupation of Mr. Farrance,
pastrycook, and east on a messuage then or late in the occupation of Mr.
Blount (No. 65). The ratebooks show that Monnet was succeeded in 1810
by Robert Barnett, and in 1820 when numbers are first given in the ratebooks, Barnett's house is numbered 66.
The site is now covered by the premises of the National Provincial
Bank.