Day 84 – Walworth Road – Penton Place – Kennington Park

A grey day towards the end of March and a complete contrast from the previous outing sees us make another foray into the southlands. To be specific, we’re venturing beyond the Elephant and Castle into the territory that expands southward between the Walworth Road and Kennington Park Road. This area is predominantly occupied by Southwark-council run public housing so, unsurprisingly, the gentrification that we’ve seen making inroads in adjacent locales barely scratches the surface here. No museums or blue plaques (apart from one kind-of) to distract us today then but still plenty to take note of. It’s also an area that suffered considerable damage as a result of the Luftwaffe’s bombing campaign in late 1940.

From Elephant and Castle tube we head a short way east on the New Kent Road the follow Elephant Road down to the Walworth Road. The railway arches here and further south and the Walworth Road itself are where all the activity in this area happens. Outside of that I hardly see another soul apart from a couple of dog-walkers and a cycling proficiency group until I get to Kennington Park.

We make a right turn into Hampton Street then immediately continue to follow the rail line south on Spare Street and then Robert Dashwood Way. I can only surmise that the latter is named after one of the two holders of the Dashwood Baronetcy (which has its seat in West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire near to where I grew up) that were Roberts but I can find no connection between either of them and this part of London. The arches along these two access roads are pretty well occupied with a variety of enterprises, including this somewhat incongruous menswear outlet. (I was tempted to take a look as a change from TK Maxx but didn’t need any extra load to carry around with me).

We return to the Walworth Road via Amelia Street and as we head back north temporarily we pass Walworth Town Hall which is over on the east side of the road. Originally named Newington Vestry Hall, it was built on land previously owned by the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers. Opened in 1865, it was designed by Henry Jarvis in the Italianate style, built by Piper and Wheeler and financed by a loan from Edward Chambers Nicholson, a wealthy local chemist.  When Newington became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Southwark in 1900 the building served as Southwark Town Hall. It ceased to be a headquarters of local government in 1965 when the London Borough of Southwark was created. It was subsequently used as workspace by the council, becoming known as “Walworth Town Hall”, and was also used as the local registrar’s office. The roof of the building was badly damaged by a fire in March 2013 and the building was subsequently added to the Heritage at Risk Register. In 2018, architects Feix & Merlin were appointed to restore the Grade II listed building and the adjacent Newington Library and Cuming Museum and create office and coworking spaces tailored to small and medium-sized businesses with room for up to 550 occupants. In 2024 I took a tour of the building as the renovations were nearing completion (the photos of the interior of the building in the slideshow below date from then). To see what it looks like inside now go to https://architecturetoday.co.uk/walworth-town-hall-feix-and-merlin-general-projects/

Steedman Street takes us back to Hampton Street from where we follow Canterbury Place through the Newington Estate. In theory at least; in reality it’s more of a tortuous ramble that delivers us onto Penton Place.

The Pullens Buildings, located on Penton Place and some of its adjoining streets are some of the last Victorian tenement buildings surviving in London. The Pullens Estate was built by James Pullen, a local builder, who acquired the land and developed it over a 15-year period from 1886. Unlike any thing else I’ve encountered on my travels, the four-storey residential buildings are faced with yellow stock brick and enriched with the use of decorative terracotta arches to the door and window openings. The full estate originally comprised 684 dwellings in 12 blocks but a V1 bomber reduced that number and post-WWII many of the remaining properties fell into disrepair. In the 1970s, the council planned to demolish the buildings but were thwarted by an alliance of the Pullens Squatter Organisation and the Residents’ Association which fought successfully to save them with a campaign of direct action and solidarity which culminated in the construction of barricades to stop police and bailiffs entering the buildings. Today around half of the remaining 351 flats in the buildings are local authority-owned with the rest in private leasehold ownership.

We turn off Penton Place onto Iliffe Street, where supermodel Naomi Campbell once lived, according to one source, and look in on Peacock Street before alighting onto Crampton Street.

Having circumnavigated Pullens Gardens by way of Amelia Street and Thrush Street we continue south on Crampton Street to Manor Place. Directly facing us is Manor Place Baths,  a Grade II listed former public baths, swimming pool and boxing venue built in 1895 to a red brick and terracotta design by the company of Edward I’Anson (who was responsible for the Royal Exchange Buildings in the City of London). The baths originally had a first- and second-class pool for men, as well as a pool for women known as the “small swim”. Mixed-gender swimming was introduced in 1904. The first-class pool was 120 ft long and boarded over in winter so that the space could be used for sporting events, concerts and other public meetings. Boxing at the baths started in 1908 and boxers who fought bouts there included the Kray twins as well as Ken Buchanan,  Henry Cooper and Terry Spinks. The building survived the bombs of WWII but fell into later disuse as a public baths as apartments in the area began to have bathrooms installed. The baths closed as a public facility in 1976 but continued as a boxing venue until a final show in 1978. By 1995 it was in a dangerously poor condition with no viable use. In 1996 it was Grade II-listed and placed on the Buildings at Risk Register by English Heritage. The building was used by Southwark London Borough Council as offices until 2005, when Tibetan Buddhist organisation Kagyu Samye Dzong London obtained an initial five-year lease to use the building as a temporary home. They renovated the building and used it as a meditation centre with regular classes and retreats until 2015 by which time it had been purchased by Notting Hill Housing to be converted into residential accommodation and commercial space.

As we head east back to Walworth Road we make a detour onto Occupation Road which retains some signs of the area’s industrial past alongside contemporary residential development.

Back on Walworth Road we’re faced with two very 21st century establishments sandwiching one which harks back almost to the 19th.

A little way further down the street is the entrance to the East Street Market which is a treat we’ll save for another day. On the far right of the picture you can just about see the plaque I mentioned at the outset. It doesn’t relate to any specific building but just notes that Charlie Chaplin was a local Walworth boy. (Spent part of his childhood in the Pullens Buildings in fact).

Making our way west again on Penrose Street we pass by Angel Place and then under the railway once more. Just on the other side of the tracks someone’s taken the idea of bringing a bit of the tropics to their front garden to something of an extreme..

Next up a right turn onto Penton Place once more from where we head north as far as Berryfield Road then follow this, Tarver Road and Delverton Road down to Braganza Street. The Braganza Street Drill Hall originates from a pair of houses built in what was then known as New Street in 1833 and which were acquired by the 19th Surrey Rifle Volunteer Corps in 1865. The street was renamed in the 1930’s and the drill hall was substantially re-built at that time and the enlarged facility opened by the Duke of Gloucester in 1938. 217 (London) General Hospital Royal Army Medical Corps, was formed here in 1967 and a Medical Regiment continues to use the building to this day.

On the corner of Braganza Street and Gaza Street there is a British Legion Club (which is only open 4 nights a week). It would be interesting to know when and why this small side street came to be named Gaza Street but sadly that information is lost in the mists of time.

We return to Penton Place for the final time via Alberta Street and Ambergate Street then turn left to reach Kennington Park Road. Proceeding southward we pass the Guinness Trust Buildings. The Guinness Partnership, as it is now known, is one of the largest providers of affordable housing in England. It was founded in 1890 as a charitable trust by the then Edward Cecil Guinness, a great-grandson of the founder of the Guinness Brewery, to help homeless people in London and Dublin. The buildings here on Kennington Park Road were originally conceived by the architect Charles Joseph in 1913 but first, strike action in the building industry, then WWI delayed construction until 1921. This was Guinness’s first development built with the support of government funding. The original plans proposed the usual pre-war architecture for 160 tenements, but new public demand for self-contained, cottage-style housing and separate bathrooms prompted a change in design and a reduction in height to height to four storeys. This meant that whilst earlier estates had been built for between £79 and £169 per tenement, Kennington Park Road cost £807 per unit (without the cost of the land).

A little way further down Kennington Park Road is the home of The Historical Association, a registered charity founded in 1906 by a small group of history teachers and academic historians to support the growing need for good history resources in schools. Today the mission is to “support the teaching, learning and enjoyment of history at all levels and bring together people who share an interest in and love for the past”. (Good stuff – perhaps I should sign up).

Just beyond Kennington tube we turn back on the Braganza Street and almost immediately resume in a southerly direction on De Laune Street (named after a prominent Huguenot family who came to London in 1572 to escape religious persecution in France). Sharsted Street, Harmsworth Street and Faunce Street take us to Doddington Grove which comes as something of a surprise. The most remarkable thing about this street is its width. Only on a couple of other occasions have we encountered a street this wide; with on-street parking on both sides and two clear lanes in the middle. The other strange thing about the street is the overwhelming contrast between its two sides. The west side consists of a row of late Victorian terrace houses that look like they’ve somehow been transported here from Pinner while the east side is dominated by the monolithic blocks of the Doddington Grove Estate.

From the northern end of Doddington Grove we double back by way of Chapter Road, Westcott Road and Cooks Road to arrive on Kennington Park Place which (naturally enough) runs alongside the top of Kennington Park.

Kennington Park was the first open space in Lambeth to be dedicated for public use, opening in 1854. Prior to that it was known as Kennington Common and was indirectly owned by the Duchy of Cornwall. In April 1848, 25,000 supporters of the Chartist Movement assembled on the common to press their demands for a ‘National Charter’ of rights for the working classes. The Park contains the Prince Consort’s Lodge which was originally built for the Great Exhibition of 1851 in Hyde Park as a ‘model dwelling’ and was re-erected here after the end of the Exhibition.

The north east corner of the park is home to one of the two ventilation shafts constructed for the Northern Line extension from Kennington to Battersea Power Station. The shaft is obviously underground but requires a structure on the surface, known as a head house, to provide access and to house ventilation fans and other equipment.

This pillar is all that remains of the Tinworth Fountain a large ornamental fountain created in 1872. The pillar originally supported a fountain bowl, a taller, slimmer column and a sculpture, The Pilgrimage of Life, the work of George Tinworth, the resident sculptor at Doulton’s Lambeth factory. The sculpture showed a man carrying a cross with a woman and child. The fountain was damaged irreparably during the Blitz while the sculpture survived until 1981. On 15 October 1940, a German bomb hit a crowded air raid shelter in the park, causing one of the worst civilian disasters in Lambeth during WWII. Roughly 104 people were killed when the underground trench shelter collapsed. The memorial in the background above, unveiled in 2006, commemorates this tragedy.

The flower garden at the southern of the park was originally opened in 1931. After falling into gradual disrepair in recent decades it was restored thanks to a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund and reopened in 2015. Although we’re on the cusp of Spring there weren’t too many flowers in evidence yet, apart from a few tulips. Still, at least it’s in better shape than the skatepark.

We exit the park onto St Agnes Place, immediately opposite the church of the same name. The original St Agnes Church on this site was built in 1875 and designed by George Gilbert Scott Jr. (son of the GGS responsible for the Midland Hotel, St Pancras and father of the GGS behind the iconic red telephone box). That first church was also destroyed in the Blitz and its current replacement was built in 1956 by Halliday and Greenwood to a design by Ralph Covell. St Agnes is a Church of England parish church in which worship follows the Catholic tradition.

You wait eons for a modernist church built on the ruins of a bombed Victorian original then two come along in the space of ten minutes. Those ten minutes were spent negotiating Meadcroft Road, Kennington Park Gardens, Royal Road, Otto Street and Fleming Road to arrive at Lorrimore Square which is the home of St Paul’s Church. The current Grade II listed church was designed by firm Woodroffe Buchanan & Coulter and built in 1959–60. The building is a modernist, reinforced concrete buttressed form with a community centre on the ground floor and the church itself and church hall above. The “folded” roof is made of plate timber and coated in turquoise oxidised copper; it incorporates a series of triangles, symbolising the Holy Trinity. The external walls are a mix of brick, reclaimed stone from the original church, and artificial blocks, some incorporating multicoloured stained glass units. That original church was designed by local ecclesiastical architect Henry Jarvis and built in a Gothic revival style in the 1850’s.

Just round the corner on Lorrimore Road, St Wilfrid’s Roman Catholic Church barely escaped the same fate as its neighbours.  This late Gothic composition in red brick was completed in 1915. In November 1940 it was struck, it is thought, by an anti-aircraft shell during a German air raid. Half the roof and one wall were blown away, the organ completely destroyed and the windows and doors ripped apart. The church was restored in 1948-1949 with the help of the War Damage Commission.

Once beyond the church we make a circuit of Forsyth Gardens then cover another section of Cooks Road. On the edge of the Brandon Estate is one of many abandoned pubs to be found in this vicinity. In terms of finding a “pub of the day” on this expedition the phrase “wild goose chase” springs to mind. On the plus side, at least the burger van wasn’t open to tempt the desperate.

Next we’re turning off onto Hillingdon Street then cutting through Copley Close to John Ruskin Street (after the 19th century art critic that we named and shamed in the last post). I was intrigued by a sign reading “Whitbread & Co’s Entire” above an alley on the south side of the street. Apparently this once led to the back entrance to the long defunct Grosvenor Arms pub on the eponymous parallel terrace. The “Entire” refers to “Entire Butt Beer,” a popular type of porter in the 18th century that was a blend of different beers, which Samuel Whitbread helped popularize.

A bit further east is the John Ruskin Primary School, designed by renowned Victorian school architect Thomas Jerram Bailey and opened in 1899.

We cut through Dichton Court to return to Hillingdon Street then work our way north via Heiron Street, Olney Road, Draco Street and Chapter Road to Carter Street. This is where you’ll find another victim of the great pub die-off. The Beehive supposedly dates back to 1830 and had something of a colourful existence (especially in its early years) until COVID did for it. The now largely forgotten sport of pedestrianism (a form of race-walking) was hugely popular in the mid-19th century. Apparently beginning with members of the aristocracy betting on races between their footmen. There are many reports of these races taking place at the Beehive in the 1840s and they often attracted crowds of 3,000 or more. In 1837 a monkey parachuted onto land next door to the pub. This was part of Mrs. Graham’s spectacular balloon show at the nearby Surrey Zoological Gardens. The unfortunate creature was dropped in a small cage from around one hundred feet in a primitive parachute but had been blown off course when it had not opened properly. Local campaigners have successfully seen off two attempts by the landlords to convert the property into flats but its future currently seems uncertain.

Having returned to the Walworth Road by way of Penrose Street, Penrose Grove and Carter Place I figure that’s enough for today and jump on the bus back to Waterloo. There’s just time for one more picture. This tiny former branch of Nat West Bank bizarrely still has operational ATMs despite being in a state of advanced decrepitude. It’s also currently the subject of a planning application – which the Walworth Society is strongly opposing. One to watch

Day 76 – King’s Road – Sydney Street – Sloane Avenue – Cadogan Square

For today’s expedition, just like Real Madrid, we’re getting stuck into Chelsea. Specifically, the area north of the King’s Road bounded by Sydney Street to the west and Sloane Street to the east. Away from the main thoroughfares it’s a relatively quiet mainly residential quarter equally comprised of streets of terraced houses (some of the most expensive in London) and large mansion blocks. There are plenty of high-end stores scattered in between and some impressive churches. Not quite such well-known names as last time as far as former residents go but some interesting characters nonetheless.

Once again the starting point is Sloane Square and this time we’re leaving via the north west corner, on Symons Street to be precise. This feeds into Culford Gardens continuing westward then we take a left turn down Blacklands Terrace onto the King’s Road. John Sandoe opened his eponymous bookshop here in 1957 with Félicité Gwynne, sister of the cookery writer Elizabeth David (who we shall meet again later).

A sequence of Lincoln Street, Coulson Street, Anderson Street and Tryon Street bring us to the eastern end of Elystan Place which on a western trajectory merges into Cale Street. The next run of streets occupy the space between that duality and the King’s Road. After Markham Street we have to backtrack along the King’s Road to visit Bywater Street and Markham Square. The latter is a prime example of the terraced housing in this part of town, immaculately maintained and with brightly painted exteriors.

No.47 Markham Square was the one-time residence of Dame Maud McCarthy (1858 – 1949), who was matron-in-chief of the British Expeditionary Force in France and Flanders during WW1. The square, unsurprisingly, also boasts a well-planted private garden.

The branch of Pizza Express at 152 King’s Road occupies the building known as The Pheasantry, which got its name from the business of one Samuel Baker who developed new breeds of oriental pheasants here in the mid-19th century. The Grecian-inspired architectural stylings, including caryatids and quadringa, were added in 1881 by the artist and interior decorator Amédée Joubert. From 1916, part of the building was used for a ballet academy run by the dance teacher Serafina Astafieva (1876–1934), great niece of Leo Tolstoy. Then in 1932, the basement became a bohemian restaurant and drinking club patronised by actors and artists such as Augustus John, Dylan Thomas, Humphrey Bogart, and Francis Bacon. The drinking club closed in 1966 after the death of the owner Mario Cazzini, and the building was converted into apartments and the basement into a nightclub. The nightclub went on to host early gigs by Lou Reed, Queen and Hawkwind. The 1972 gig by Queen, which had been intended as a showcase for the band, did not go well. One attendee remembered that the band were “unpolished” and since the venue was mainly a disco, “once the disco had stopped and Queen went on everyone went to the bar.” (Oh, happy days). The Pheasantry name lives on under Pizza Express in the form of a basement jazz and cabaret venue.

To the west of The Pheasantry we turn north on Jubilee Place then return via Godfrey Street and Burnstall Street. The latter was once home to actress Diana Dors (1931 – 1984). Britain’s answer to the American “blonde bombshells” of the 1950’s was born in Swindon as Diana Mary Fluck. She made her screen debut in the British noir The Shop at Sly Corner (1947) in a walk-on role that developed into a speaking part. During the signing of contracts she changed her contractual surname to Dors, the maiden name of her maternal grandmother, later commenting “They asked me to change my name. I suppose they were afraid that if my real name, Diana Fluck, was in lights and one of the lights blew …”. Diana had an extremely varied career though she was rarely offered quality roles in films and by the 1970’s was restricted to a series of abysmal sex comedies and TV work. Her most acclaimed role was probably playing a Ruth Ellis-style character in 1956’s Yield To The Night. Dors had supposedly been close friends with Ellis, who was the last woman to be hanged in Britain, the year before the film was released. To say that Dors’ personal life was colourful doesn’t come close to covering it. At 10 Burnsall Street in the 1960s’ she hosted lavish “adult” parties that lasted until dawn, with guests including the Kray Twins, press coverage of which provoked the Archbishop of Canterbury Geoffrey Fisher to denounce Dors as a “wayward hussy” and her home as a “den of scandal”.

We make our way back up to Cale Street and then down to the King’s Road for the final time today taking in Danube Street, Astell Street, St Luke’s Street, Britten Street and Chelsea Manor Street (with a nod to Hemus Place). Britten Street once hosted the Anchor Brewery, which shut down in 1907, the site is now occupied by an office block called Anchor House but the brewery’s original arch (and anchor) remain in situ.

After that final incursion onto King’s Road we head north up Sydney Street and soon find ourselves in the splendid gardens attached to the imposing St Luke’s Church. St Luke’s, which was consecrated in 1824 and bears a striking resemblance to King’s College Chapel in Cambridge, is regarded as one of the first Neo-Gothic churches to be built in London. The nave, at 60ft in height, is the tallest of any parish church in the capital and the tower reaches a height of 142 feet. The architect was James Savage, one of the foremost authorities on medieval architecture of his time. Charles Dickens was married here on 2nd April 1836 to Catherine Hogarth, eldest daughter of George, who was editor of ‘The Evening Chronicle’ in which Dickens’ Sketches by Boz appeared. The large burial ground which surrounded the church was converted into a public garden in 1881, the gravestones being placed to form a boundary wall.

After visiting the church we continue north on Sydney Street up to Fulham Road then immediately make a loop down Bury Walk and up Pond Place. After heading east about a hundred metres on Fulham Road we turn right onto Elystan Street then right onto Ixworth Place to complete a circuit round the Samuel Lewis Trust Dwellings. Samuel Lewis was born in Birmingham in 1837. He began work at 13 and in due course became a salesman of steel pens, then opened a jeweller’s shop, and finally entered the money-lending business, becoming the go-to money-lender for most of Britain’s aristocracy. When he died, in London in 1901, he left an endowment of £670,000 to set up a charitable trust to provide housing for the poor, a huge sum at the time and one that equates to £30 million at today’s values. The estate in Chelsea was the second of eight to be built between 1`910 and the start of WW2.

We circle back to Elystan Street via Marlborough Street then turn south past one of many parades of tastefully presented shops.

If you look closely you’ll see that the middle emporium is called Chelsea Green Shoe Repairs. In all innocence I initially took this to be a pitch for ecological credibility; however when I reached to the nexus of Cale Street and Elystan Place a short distance further south I realised that there is an actual Chelsea Green. Though, to put it kindly, that nomenclature is somewhat stretching a point; my back garden is bigger (and greener) and that’s not saying much.

Forking left off of Elystan Place into Sprimont Place there is more distinctive architecture in the form of The Gateways, a 1934 housing development designed by Wills and Kaula that now has a Grade II Listing.

Sprimont Place emerges onto Sloane Avenue, on the east side of which stand two very different high rise residential buildings though both date from the 1930’s and were designed by the same architect, George Kay Green (1877 – 1939). The Art Deco eleven-storey Sloane Avenue Mansions was completed first, in 1933. Neighbouring Nell Gwynn House was finished four years later and has a Cubist design which utilises Egyptian, Aztec, and Mayan patterns and decoration. From the outset, each apartment had built-in central heating and there was a restaurant in the basement, a hairdressing salon, and a bar in the lobby. Above the main entrance, at the level of the 2nd floor, is a statue of Nell Gwynn, with a Cavalier King Charles spaniel at her feet. This is reputedly the only statue of any Royal mistress to be found in London.

We return to Elystan Street down Whitehead’s Grove then back to Sloane Avenue via Petyward. On the intersection of Makin Street with Sloane Avenue there is a combined Kwik-Fit and 24-hour petrol station which at first sight appears totally incongruous in this context. But then you realise that all those Chelsea tractors have to have somewhere to fuel up.

Rounding the garage we proceed north up Lucan Place to the point at which Fulham Road turns into Brompton Road and where stands Michelin House, one of the most distinctive and iconic buildings in the whole of the capital. Michelin House was constructed as the first permanent UK headquarters and tyre depot for the Michelin Tyre Company Ltd, opening for business in January 1911. The building was designed in an Art Nouveau style by one of Michelin’s employees, François Espinasse. It has three large stained-glass windows based on Michelin advertisements of the time, all featuring the Michelin Man aka “Bibendum” and around the front of the original building at street level there are a number of decorative tiles showing famous racing cars of the time that used Michelin tyres. When Michelin moved out of the building in 1985, it was purchased by publisher Paul Hamlyn and the restaurateur/retailer Sir Terence Conran who embarked on a major redevelopment that included the restoration of some of the original features. The new development, which opened in 1987, also featured offices for Hamlyn’s company Octopus Publishing, as well as Conran’s Bibendum Restaurant & Oyster Bar, and a Conran Shop. The dining experience is nowadays run by Chef Claude Bosi and the prices are not for the fainthearted.

From the east side of Bibendum we follow Sloane Avenue back south almost all the way to the King’s Road. Instead we turn east onto Bray Place then take Blacklands Terrace up to Draycott Place, passing the Spanish Consulate as we resume eastward.

St Mary’s Church on the corner of Drayton Terrace and Cadogan Street looks rather humdrum in comparison with St Luke’s but, as you would expect from a Roman Catholic house of worship, the glories are all interior. The original St Mary’s was built close to the present site in 1812 and was one of the first Catholic chapels in the country since the Reformation. The foundation stone of the present church was laid in 1877. It was designed by John Francis Bentley (1839-1902), an English church architect chiefly known for Westminster Cathedral. For many years the church served the spiritual needs of the Roman Catholic residents of the Royal Chelsea Hospital. One of the special features of the interior is the hanging rood which has a figure of Christ, robed and crowned and the symbols of the four Evangelists.

From the church we head east on Cadogan Street into Cadogan Gardens then take a right into the southernmost section of Pavilion Road which is the area’s home of al- fresco dining and is one of the few places I’ve seen so far making any effort to prepare for the forthcoming Coronation.

Having completed the full circuit of Cadogan (private of course) Gardens we return to Draycott Place and proceed west to the southern end of Draycott Avenue.

Flat 14, Avenue Court on Draycott Avenue was home between 1949 and 1955 to the New Zealand-born reconstructive surgeon, Sir Archibald McIndoe (1900 – 1960) who is feted for his work with seriously burned aircrew of the RAF during WW2. The painting below was done by artist Anna Zinkeisen in 1944 and depicts McIndoe operating at the Queen Victoria Hospital in East Grinstead.

We wend our way northward to the east of Draycott Avenue taking in Rawlings Street, Rosemoor Street, Denyer Street to reach today’s pub of the day, The Admiral Codrington on Mossop Street. The pub is named after Sir Edward Codrington (1770 – 1851) who served in the Battle of Trafalgar and the Battle of Navarino (Greek war of independence). As a consequence of the ships under his command destroying the Turkish and Egyptian fleets in the latter engagement, Codrington is a popular figure in Greece. His reputation in this country however is tarnished by the fact that he and his siblings inherited a slave plantation in Antigua from their uncle. The other two pubs named after him, in Coventry and south-east London, have both closed and I suspect, if this remains open, it may need to do so under a different name in future. In any event I enjoyed my Chicken Milanese sandwich and half a Madri.

The pub faces onto an empty 4 hectare lot that was formerly the site of the John Lewis Clearing Depot which was built in the 1930’s. John Lewis closed the depot in 2010 and acquired permission to redevelop the site a year later, however, according to the bar staff, the building was only demolished about 18 months ago. It is reported that Mike Ashley (Sports Direct) was behind two companies that acquired the site from John Lewis for £200m in 2015. There is little sign of any construction work going on at the moment. Anyway, after leaving the pub we swing round Ives Street and drop onto Donne Place where maverick inventor Sir Clive Sinclair (1940 – 2021) lived at no.32 from 1982 to 1987, a period that covered both the heyday of the ZX Spectrum home computer and the unfortunate failure of the Sinclair C5 electric vehicle.

From Donne Place we visit Bulls Gardens and Richard’s Place on the way to Milner Street. We then traverse between Milner Street and Walton Street on First Street, Hasker Street and Ovington Street. No.10 Milner Street, which is also known as Stanley House, was built in 1855 in an Italianate style built by the Chelsea speculator John Todd for his own occupation. From 1945 it was home to the interior designer Michael Inchbald and his wife Jacqueline, who founded the Inchbald School of Design in the basement in 1960. The house was Grade-II listed in 1969, an honour it shares with the other Stanley House in the area, at 550 King’s Road (which is for another day).

No launderette of the day this time (unsurprisingly) so we’ll have to make to do with the Elite Dry Cleaners at the top of Ovington Street. Come on you Reds !

Round the corner on Walton Street, the building at No. 1a started life as a school then became a magistrate’s court and finally a private mansion. In 2018 it was sold for over £50m following the death of the previous owner Canadian cable TV mogul David Graham, who had infuriated neighbours by submitting plans to triple its size by digging down 50ft to create a four-storey basement with 45ft pool, hot tub, sauna, massage room, ballroom, covered courtyards, staff accommodation, parking and car lift. The proposal was thrown out by Kensington and Chelsea council.

After looking in on Lennox Gardens Mews we navigate the loop that is Lennox Gardens and arrive at St Columba’s Presbyterian Church on Pont Street. The Church of Scotland originally built a kirk here in 1884 but that was hit by a German incendiary bomb in May 1941 and burnt to the ground. It took 14 years before the rebuilt church that we see today was open for worship. As you might expect the interior of the church is even more spartan than that of your typical C&E.

From Pont Street we make a tour of Cadogan Square, Clabon Mews and the northern section of Pavilion Road before returning to Milner Street. At 72 Cadogan Square there is a blue plaque commemorating the war correspondent and writer , Martha Gellhorn (1908 – 1998). Gellhorn met Ernest Hemingway during a 1936 Christmas family trip to Key West, Florida. Gellhorn had been hired to report for Collier’s Weekly magazine on the Spanish Civil War, and the pair decided to travel to Europe together. They celebrated Christmas of 1937 in Barcelona then, moving on to Germany, she reported on the rise of Adolf Hitler. In the spring of 1938, months before the Munich Agreement, she was in Czechoslovakia. After the outbreak of World War II, she described these events in the 1940 novel A Stricken Field. The same year she married Hemingway. Subsequently, Gellhorn reported on the war from Finland, Hong Kong, Burma, Singapore, and England. In June 1944, she applied to the British government for press accreditation to report on the Normandy landings; her application, like those of all female journalists, was denied. So, posing as a nurse she got herself onto a hospital ship where she promptly locked herself in a bathroom. Consequently, she was the only woman to land at Normandy on D-Day, becoming a stretcher-bearer for the wounded. A year later she and Hemingway divorced.

Final church of the day is St Simon Zelotes on the corner of Milner Street and Moore Street. This was designed by Joseph Peacock in the High Victorian tradition and completed in 1851. The church is named for Simon the Zealot, one of the less well-known of Jesus’s apostles. Very little of substance seems to have been recorded about Simon. He is variously reported as having been martyred by either crucifixion or being sawn in half but other accounts have him dying peacefully in his sleep. Despite this obscurity he is regarded as a saint by nearly all the major Christian faiths.

Final street of the day is Halsey Street, which also hosts a final blue plaque. I mentioned Elizabeth David (1913 – 1992) right and the start of this post and mentioned that we’d be returning to her later. Well, here she is at no. 24 where she lived and worked from 1947 until her death. Before she settled down to become one of the most influential cookery writers of the 20th century David had an eventful personal life. In the 1930s she studied art in Paris, became an actress, and ran off with a married man with whom she sailed in a small boat to Italy, where their boat was confiscated. They reached Greece, where they were nearly trapped by the German invasion in 1941, but escaped to Egypt, where they parted. She then worked for the British government, running a library in Cairo. After returning to England, she published her first cookery book, A Book of Mediterranean Food, in 1950 when rationing was still in force and many of the ingredients she championed were unavailable. Nonetheless, the book was a success and she went on to write seven more over the next three and a half decades becoming a major influence on British cooking, both domestic and professional.