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West Kensington

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44-511: West Kensington , formerly North End , is an area in the ancient parish of Fulham , in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham , England, 3.4 miles (5.5 km) west of Charing Cross . It covers most of the London postal area of W14 , including the area around Barons Court tube station , and is defined as the area between Lillie Road and Hammersmith Road to the west, Fulham Palace Road to

88-570: A 22 year old police officer of the Metropolitan Police , was fatally shot by Liam Quinn , a member of the Provisional IRA , after a chase near Barons Court tube station . It was later discovered that a flat on Fairholme Road was used by the IRA and Quinn himself as a 'bomb factory'. North End, Fulham North End was, until the last quarter of the 19th-century, a scattered hamlet among

132-654: A Fulham backwater. West Kensington tube station on the Metropolitan District Railway , was originally called 'Fulham - North End'. 51°29′27″N 0°12′25″W  /  51.49083°N 0.20694°W  / 51.49083; -0.20694 This London location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Elizabeth Craven Elizabeth, Princess Berkeley (born Lady Elizabeth Berkeley ; 17 December 1750 – 13 January 1828), sometimes unofficially styled Margravine of Brandenburg-Ansbach , previously Elizabeth Craven, Baroness Craven ,

176-576: A few scattered houses along North End Lane which wound its way from Walham Green to the trunk road linking the parishes of Hammersmith and Kensington. The main topographical feature was Counter's Creek , a tributary of the Thames River , rising in Kensal Green , which marked the parish boundary. Among the notable residents who had settled in this quiet rural retreat were Samuel Richardson , Samuel Foote , Francesco Bartolozzi , Sir John Lillie and then in

220-525: A group of roads in West Kensington are named after members of his family. They include: Perham, Charleville, Gledstanes, Barton, Fairholme, Comeragh, Castletown and Vereker Roads and Challoner Street. He also owned the 11 acres (45,000 m) which would become the Queen's Club. However, as he was heavily in debt when he died suddenly in 1882, his family did not benefit from his deals. A contemporary of Palliser

264-545: A large student population, serving Imperial College London , Charing Cross Hospital , South Kensington , Hammersmith and other Central London Universities. Avonmore Road. built in the 1880s, has been dubbed "Kensington Village". Whiteleys Furniture Repositories, laundry and stables, built along the West London line , belonged to London's first department store in Westbourne Grove . The high-ceilinged Warwick Building

308-639: A measure of success in Fulham. Margravine Cemetery and some of the streets near Barons Court station, recall the brief sojourn in the County of Middlesex of the last Margrave of Brandenburg, Alexander, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1736-1806) and his second wife, the English Lady Elizabeth Craven , who in 1792 bought the handsome mansion on the Thames at Fulham, originally built by Sir Nicholas Crisp in

352-623: A new independent school, has been temporarily housed in a former Local education authority special school on Mund Street W14, while the Fulham Police station site off Fulham Broadway becomes the school's new premises. The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA), one of UK's leading theatre schools, moved in 2005 into the former premises of the Royal Ballet School at 153-155 Talgarth Road, after years in Earl's Court . Despite its name,

396-550: A post office, until a sub-post office agreement was reached with the retail outlet, North End News . West Kensington once had on its fringes the dominating presence of a terracotta cluster of Neo Gothic buildings amid lush playing fields, of St Paul's School backing onto the Talgarth Road, between 1884 and 1968. It has since migrated to its fifth set of buildings now south of the Thames river in Barnes , since it left, centuries ago,

440-439: A railway and the creek was turned into a sewer. With it came gradual urbanisation, which drew in various developers including Gibbs and Flew. Apart from their unsold houses, there was the problem of accessibility. A bridge was needed over the railways, but despite Gibbs and Flew trying to finance it, it led to their bankruptcy and the dissolution of the partnership in 1885. Gibbs and Flew thereafter carried on separate businesses with

484-456: A residential area consisting mainly of Victorian terraced houses , many of which are subdivided into flats. There are some interesting examples of Victorian architecture , with several houses and some entire streets listed – including the imposing mansion blocks of Fitzgeorge Avenue (off North End Road ) and the mansion blocks around Avonmore Road including, Glyn Mansions (Built 1897), Avonmore Mansions and Avonmore Gardens (Built 1893) which

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528-571: Is located next to the new Kensington Village development. West Kensington Court was purpose built and completed in 1938 with a view of providing what were considered at the time luxury flats for young professionals and families wishing to move from older-style properties. There are also a number of ex-local authority and local authority buildings around the North End Road, including the recently renovated Lytton Estate. Many of buildings have been sold off. A more recent private development, St Paul's Court,

572-623: Is on the District line linking Upminster with Ealing Broadway station and Richmond . There is a branch line (running between Kensington Olympia-Earl's Court-Kensington High Street) and the Piccadilly line from Barons Court , the Hammersmith & City line from Hammersmith tube station , and the Central line from Shepherd's Bush and Holland Park. A local transport-related curiosity (and not open to

616-595: The Earls Court Regeneration Project , with Transport for London having a 30% interest, and with the surprising cooperation of Historic England who were persuaded to grant a Certificate of Immunity from Listing (COIL), to enable the Art Deco structure to be demolished. The Lillie Bridge Depot was also in the frame and as it was claimed the Earls Court Project would bring considerable benefits to

660-558: The Famous Three Kings pub, hosted many rock and punk concerts in the 1970s and early 1980s. Joy Division , The Sex Pistols and The Police all played there regularly. In Hanif Kureishi 's novel The Buddha of Suburbia , the main character moves from the southern suburbs of London to West Kensington and lives by the Nashville. He witnesses one of the first presentations of a punk band, probably The Sex Pistols. The flat featured in

704-663: The House of Hohenzollern , and childless, had exchanged his hereditary birthright to the appanages of Ansbach and Bayreuth for an annuity of 300,000 guilders from his pater familias , King Frederick William II of Prussia , a month after his second marriage. In England, however, the couple were usually known as the Margrave and Margravine of Brandenburg-Ansbach. After Alexander's death at Benham Park in 1806, Princess Berkeley moved to Naples . She died at Craven Villa in Posillipo and

748-536: The Jersey socialite ) and had a frontage of 140 feet along the newly laid out road running from Lillie Bridge (Fulham) to North End Lane. According to Féret the landlady was a Miss Goslin. All that remains of North End in memory is the North End Road, Fulham . In the 1880s, the area became known as " West Kensington ", at the request of developers Gibbs and Flew who were having trouble selling their newly built houses in

792-585: The Olympia Exhibition Centre nearby. West Kensington is within easy reach of Earl's Court , and the Broadways of Fulham and Hammersmith . There are several pubs and hotels, including The Albion public house, which is reputedly haunted. The Baron's Court Theatre is located in the basement of The Curtains Up bar and restaurant. One of the oldest extant Polish Patisserie -delicatessens in London, Prima ,

836-453: The 17th century and renamed it "Brandenburg House". After the Margrave died, his wife, the Margravine, occupied it till her retirement to Naples in 1819. Between 1820 and 1822 it was lent by the Margravine to Caroline of Brunswick , the estranged consort of King George IV who lived and died there. After Queen Caroline's death, the Margravine first sold off the contents of the house, then had

880-402: The 1969 BBC series 'Take Three Girls' was at 17 Glazbury Road. The 2005 Woody Allen film Match Point was shot on location at Queen's Club and in the surrounding residential streets. Heather Graham and Mia Kirshner play upper-middle-class dilettantes from West Kensington in the 2008 movie Buy Borrow Steal. West Kensington is well served by public transport. West Kensington station

924-471: The Royal Household. The royal connection continued through the decades and Diana, Princess of Wales opened the barrel-shaped Earls Court II hall, which in 1991 straddled the boundary between Hammersmith and Fulham and Kensington and Chelsea ; but after a confidential decision taken by the two boroughs in 2008, demolition began in 2015. The entire venue was closed down in 2014. Other notable structures on

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968-643: The area, it was recognised by the Mayor's London Plan, under Boris Johnson , as an Opportunity Area in July 2011. The project, expected to span 15–20 years, would involve the redevelopment of 80 acres of land around the Earl's Court Exhibition Centres and the West Kensington & Gibb's Green Estate and a swathe of private businesses and other homes. The proposals included the creation of "four new village centres" across North End Road, West Kensington, West Brompton and Earl's Court. There

1012-532: The church building was completely destroyed by a V1 flying bomb. The present church building dates from the 1960s. Blythe House has been used as a filming location for numerous films including Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy . In the film Trainspotting , the flat that Renton shows the young couple around when he gets the job as an estate agent and ultimately stashes Begbie and Sickboy in is 78A North End Road, opposite West Kensington tube station. The Nashville Rooms, now

1056-468: The church of St Andrew's, Fulham Fields is located in West Kensington. It was built by Newman and Billing in 1873, consecrated in 1874, and enlarged by Aston Webb and Ingress Bell in 1894. West Kensington's main parish church, St Mary's, is located in Hammersmith Road, near the junction with Edith Road. The original church building was built in 1813 and given its own parish in 1836. In June 1944

1100-541: The commercial centres at Fulham and Hammersmith Broadway . "West Kensington" is an early marketing construct, a ploy by two Victorian developers who found they had trouble selling their rapidly erected estate of terraced housing in the hamlet of North End on the outskirts of the village of Walham Green . In 1876 William Henry Gibbs and John P. Flew, builders from Dorset , decided to capitalise on their modest success in Kensington , by speculatively building 1,200 houses on

1144-669: The composer Maria Theresia von Ahlefeldt among its members. Princess Frederica Caroline of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld , the Margrave's wife since 1754, died on 18 February 1791, and Lord Craven died in Lausanne on 26 September 1791. Lady Craven and the Margrave then married in Lisbon on 30 October 1791 and settled in England. While the Margravine was snubbed by ladies mindful of their reputations, as well as by her new husband's cousin, King George III , and by Queen Marie Antoinette when she visited France,

1188-402: The couple lived a full and opulent life in Hammersmith , London, and at Benham Park , Berkshire . Lady Craven was never legally entitled to share her husband's German rank and title, though on 20 February 1801, she was granted the morganatic title of "Princess ( Fürstin ) Berkeley" by the last Holy Roman Emperor , Francis II . In fact, Alexander, being the last of his cadet branch of

1232-558: The couple parted permanently in 1780. She had an affair with Charles Francis Greville sometime in late 1783. Thereafter she lived in France and traveled extensively on the Continent. For a number of years she maintained a romantic relationship with Alexander, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach . During her years at the Ansbach court, Lady Craven formed an amateur theatre at court, which counted

1276-620: The fields and market gardens, between Counter's Creek and Walham Green in the Parish of Fulham in the County of Middlesex . In connection with the development of the Kensington Canal on the northern boundary of Fulham parish, Sir John Scott Lillie built the 'North End Brewery' complex in 1832. The attached public house was called the 'Lillie Arms' (today's Lillie Langtry in Lillie Road , misnamed later for an alleged local connection with

1320-442: The late 19th century, the artists Edward and Georgiana Burne-Jones . The quiet of North End was sorely disturbed from 1824 onwards when local landowner William Edwardes, 2nd Baron Kensington , along with several others, decided to cash in on the already waning canal boom by converting a section of Counter's Creek into the Kensington Canal . It was not a success. Eventually the canal was filled in, and in mid 19th century it became

1364-610: The market gardens west of the West London Railway in Fulham. However, the housing slump of the 1880s left them with many unsold properties. They succeeded in persuading the Metropolitan Borough of Fulham to have North End renamed 'West Kensington' to attract new investors to their empty houses. From the High Middle Ages , the hamlet of North End in the County of Middlesex was mainly farmland and market gardens, with

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1408-847: The old cathedral cloister in the City of London . A junior feeder school which moved with it, was the preparatory Colet Court , started in Edith Road in 1881, then on Hammersmith Road and is now renamed St Paul's Juniors in Barnes. Part of the old St Paul's site in Hammersmith is occupied by one of four campuses of the FE Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College , and by the Parayhouse Educational facility. West Kensington has two St James Independent Schools , for juniors and senior girls. Fulham Boys School ,

1452-758: The property demolished and sold the grounds for industrial development. Part went to the Haig distillery , the rest was bought for a sugar refinery. Another local landowner and developer in the 19th century was the Irish-born politician Sir William Palliser . It is possible that the station built on Palliser's land and opened in 1874, was named after the Irish estate of the Earls of Abercorn , Baronscourt in County Tyrone where Palliser may have had connections. As well as Palliser Road itself,

1496-476: The public as a memorial to those who had perished. The railway developments at North End included the Lillie Bridge Depot , an important historic engineering workshop with secondary access from Beaumont Avenue since 1872. The Earls Court Exhibition pleasure gardens , an international venue, was begun by John Robinson Whitley , visited by Queen Victoria in her Jubilee year, and subsequently frequented by

1540-680: The public) is the London Underground training centre that contains a mock-up station called West Ashfield tube station . It is located on the third floor of Ashfield House. Despite its recent erection, it is scheduled for demolition as part of the Earls Court Regeneration Scheme . The London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham and the Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea resolved in secret to go on to grant outline planning permission for developers' Capco Masterplan for

1584-466: The site were the giant Ferris wheel (1895-1907) and the 6,000 seat Empress Hall (1894), built for impresario Imre Kiralfy , both long gone. The campaign for a bridge into West Kensington from nearby Earl's Court was taken up by local residents and the West Cromwell Road bridge was eventually commenced in 1938 and, interrupted by World War II , was opened in 1942. West Kensington is primarily

1628-663: The south, Hammersmith to the north and West Brompton and Earl's Court to the east. The area is bisected by the major London artery the A4 , locally known as the Talgarth Road . Its main local thoroughfare is the North End Road . It is predominantly a dense residential area with the Queen's Club in its midst and is bordered by the Lillie Bridge railway depot , the now defunct Earls Court Exhibition Centre site, Olympia Exhibition Centre and

1672-519: Was Sir Robert Gunter whose family also left its mark on a number of streets that were built on his North End estate. They are Gunterstone Road, Edith Road and Edith Villas in memory of his daughter who died of scarlet fever , aged eight. After the severe bomb and landmine damage to the area during World War II , the Gunter estate donated Gwendwr Gardens , formerly the Cedars Lawn Tennis Club, to

1716-543: Was an author and playwright, perhaps best known for her travelogues . Elizabeth Berkeley was born in Mayfair , London, the third child of Augustus Berkeley, 4th Earl of Berkeley and his wife, Elizabeth , daughter of Henry Drax and Elizabeth Ernle. Her life was full of scandal: on 30 May 1767, "much against her will at the age of sixteen", she was married to William Craven, 6th Baron Craven . After thirteen years of marriage, seven children, and affairs reported on both sides,

1760-420: Was built in 1980 on part of the vast former site of St Paul's School. Since much of the housing is in the rented sector, West Kensington has become a cosmopolitan enclave. There are significant populations of Arabs, Americans, Australians, New Zealanders, Irish, Italians, Spaniards, and French, encouraged by nearby private schools teaching in their native language can be found around Brook Green. The area also has

1804-600: Was buried in 1828 in the English Cemetery at Naples. Her links with the Hammersmith area are commemorated in the names of two roads in the area – Margravine Gardens and Margravine Road . There is a wall monument by Roubiliac to her in St Mary's Church, Scarborough . Her children were: Early in her literary career she wrote a number of light farces , pantomimes , and fables , some of which were performed in London. She knew Samuel Johnson and James Boswell , and became

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1848-608: Was opened in North End Road in 1946. For several decades after World War II , the editorial offices of the Polish Daily , the UK's oldest Polish language paper, were located in Charleville Road. The Carnival Store is a longstanding fancy dress and costume shop in Hammersmith Road and family owned for the past 40 years. In February 2009, the W14 postcode became the first London postal area without

1892-540: Was strong local and international opposition to the project which put thousands of people's homes, employment and businesses at permanent risk. The prevailing political and economic climate not only blighted the area but also the project. The developers sold on their loss-making venture in December 2019, while Hammersmith and Fulham Council have arranged with the buyers, Delancey to buy back the two housing estates still occupied by residents. On 26 February 1975, Stephen Tibble,

1936-634: Was used as a depository for Whiteleys-sourced furnishings (grand pianos, chaise longues, oriental room dividers, mahogany wardrobes) for the use of customers who were resident in the colonies. Kensington Village now consists of a blend of modernised Victorian buildings, such as the Warwick Building, and modern additions such as the Pembroke Building, built in a similar style with London stock brick and red lintels and full-height glazing. Local business consists of small shops, offices and restaurants, with

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