Brompton Square

Brompton Square is a garden square in London's Brompton district, in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea.

Brompton Square, 2008

History

Brompton Square (centre) on an 1860s Ordnance Survey map

The initial development of the square was undertaken by James Bonnin in 1821.

Listed buildings

Houses in Brompton Square, 2007

Many of the houses that surround Brompton Square are Grade II listed on the National Heritage List for England. The individual listed houses on the square are 27,[1] 31a,[2] 56,[3] 57[4] and 58.[5] The houses listed in groups and pairs are 3–9,[6] 10–12,[7] 13–16,[8] 17–19,[9] 20–25,[10] 28–31,[11] 32–36,[12] 37–53,[13] 54–55[14] and 59–60.[15] A stuccoed doric portico forms part of 31 Brompton Square and is listed as 36 Ennismore Gardens.[16]

Notable residents

Brompton Square Gardens, 2007, private gardens in the centre of the square for the use of residents

Notable residents have included:

Mary Melissa Hoadley Dodge, the American heiress, lived there. The writer on natural history Mary Roberts lived and died there. The engineer Charles Anthony Corbett Wilson was born there in 1827.[citation needed]

William Henry Rhodes-Moorhouse, the Royal Air Force fighter pilot and flying ace killed in action during the Battle of Britain, was born there in 1914. Robin Hill, 8th Marquess of Downshire, was born there in 1929.[citation needed]

In the late 19th century the Brompton district was very popular with actors, and Brompton Square was at some point home to the performers John Liston (No. 40), Mary and Robert Keeley (No. 19), J. B. Buckstone (No. 6) and Horace and Alfred Wigan.[18][25]

References

Media related to Brompton Square, London at Wikimedia Commons

51°29′53″N 0°10′07″W / 51.4980°N 0.1687°W / 51.4980; -0.1687