Hesper Mews is a mews street in the Earl's Court district of London, England. It runs between Bramham Gardens and Collingham Gardens and was laid-out in 1884-85 as part of the Gunter Estate, developed in the nineteenth century by James Gunter and his descendants.

Hesper Mews
Houses in Hesper Mews
Hesper Mews is located in Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea
Hesper Mews
Hesper Mews within the borough of Kensington and Chelsea
Part ofGunter Estate
TypeMews street
LocationEarl's Court, London
Postal codeSW5
Coordinates51°29′30″N 0°11′24″W / 51.4916°N 0.1901°W / 51.4916; -0.1901
Construction
Construction start1884-85

Houses in the Mews are much smaller than in the higher-class streets adjacent and were used as accommodation for servants and stabling for horses. Later they were home to drivers and their vehicles, and from the mid-twentieth century were increasingly occupied by middle and upper-class families.

Origins

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Hesper Mews on an Ordnance Survey map of 1913

Hesper Mews was laid out in 1884-85 as part of the Gunter Estate which was developed by James Gunter and his descendants in the nineteenth century.[1] The origin of its name is unknown.[2]

The Mews are to the east of Earls Court Road and immediately to the south of Barkston Gardens which was built by the Gunters on the site of the former Earl's Court House.[1] The area was largely rural before the Gunter family began to develop it and the Mews lie on farmland formerly known as Four Acre Court Field and part of Great Courtfield.[1]

They are in the Earl's Court district of London, England, in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, and run between Bramham Gardens and Collingham Gardens and largely parallel to Bramham Gardens. There are three closes on the north side.[3]

Character

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The Survey of London write that mews were of "considerable importance" to the Gunter Estate, with Hesper Mews the last mews to be laid out, in 1884–85, "the biggest and finest" and "on generous lines".[1] It is one of the few mews on the Estate that is accessed from the higher status streets around it through a normal street entrance rather than through an archway.[1] Nonetheless, the role of mews houses as accommodation for servants, particularly coachmen, with stabling on the ground floor for their employer's horses,[4][5] is evident from the street plan with the houses in Barkston Gardens and Bramham Gardens, on to which the mews back, being much larger than those in Hesper Mews.

The British Architect commented in 1886, with reference to houses in Collingham Gardens, with which the Mews were also associated, that the stables in Hesper Mews were "quite out of sight" of Collingham Gardens,[6] reflecting the need at the time for rich and poor to have "proximate but separate lives".[4] As the horse gave way to the motor car, the coachmen of London's mews were replaced by, or found new employment as, chauffeurs and drivers with the ground floor used as garages for their vehicles,[7] but, in the mid and later twentieth century, as the original leases ended and London's mews became gentrified, mews houses were increasingly occupied by middle and upper-class families.[8]

Notable residents

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Number 26 seen in 2022

Notable former residents include:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "The Gunter estate". Survey of London. Retrieved 25 October 2022.
  2. ^ Bebbington, Gillian. (1972) London Street Names. London: B. T. Batsford. p. 172. ISBN 0713401400
  3. ^ Ordnance Survey map of London. Southampton, 1916, sheet VIII.4.
  4. ^ a b Uncover London: How Very A-Mewsing. Bruno Diaz, Londnr, 7 November 2018. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  5. ^ "Devonshire, Weymouth and New Cavendish Streets" in South-East Marylebone, Survey of London Vols. 51 & 52, London, 2017.
  6. ^ "Houses in Collingham Gardens", The British Architect, 12 March 1886, pp. 245-246.
  7. ^ Historic England. "41-42 and 43 Hay's Mews (1474784)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  8. ^ Glass, Ruth. (1964) London: Aspects of change. London: MacGibbon & Kee. p. xviii-xix.
  9. ^ Creative Canada: A biographical dictionary of twentieth-century creative and performing artists volume 1. University of Toronto Press, 1971. ISBN 9781442637832
  10. ^ "D’Oyly-Hughes, Captain Guy." Who's Who 2022, online edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  11. ^ Catalogue of the Sport in Art Exhibition Together with List of Awards in the International Competition 15 July to 14 August. London, 1948. p. 48.
  12. ^ The British Imperial Calendar and Civil Service List. H. M. Stationery Office, London, 1952. p. 733.
  13. ^ "The Membership and Programs of the IGY Participating Committees", Annals of the International Geophysical Year, Vol. IX (1959), p. 245.
  14. ^ People of Today, Debrett's Peerage Limited, London, 1995. p. 577. ISBN 1870520246
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