Kinnerton Street
![]() | |
![]() | |
Area | Belgravia |
---|---|
Location | City of Westminster, London, England |
Postal code | SW1 |
Coordinates | 51°30′03″N 0°09′24″W / 51.50076°N 0.15670°W |
Construction | |
Completion | c. early 1800s |
Other | |
Known for | St George's Hospital medical school |
Kinnerton Street is in the district of
Location
The street runs between Duplex Ride in the north and Motcomb Street in the south. It is also joined on its east side to Wilton Place and on its west side by Studio Place, Kinnerton Place, Frederic Mews, and Capeners Close.[1]
History
Kinnerton Street was originally built as a service street for the Grosvenor Estate's Wilton Crescent and Wilton Street. It was named after Lower Kinnerton in Cheshire[2] associated with the Grosvenor family,[3] but swiftly became a slum. The small side streets on its west side end at the Ranelagh Sewer which was not enclosed until 1844. In the mid-nineteenth century its inhabitants were the animals, servants, shopkeepers, and tradesmen who served the wealthy streets adjacent to Kinnerton. It was only gentrified much later.[2][4]
Buildings
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/dd/Wilton_Arms%2C_Kinnerton_Street_%28geograph_4720540%29.jpg/220px-Wilton_Arms%2C_Kinnerton_Street_%28geograph_4720540%29.jpg)
In the mid-1830s Sir Benjamin Brodie provided the capital to purchase a building at the northern end of Kinnerton Street to be the new medical school for the nearby St George's Hospital.[4] Henry Gray probably began his studies of anatomy at Kinnerton Street and carried out the dissecting for Gray's Anatomy there.[4] From 1836, St George's, then based nearby at Hyde Park Corner rented buildings for its School of Anatomy and Medicine.[5] In 1868, the School moved to the main hospital buildings and formally became part of the St. George's Hospital Medical School.[5]
The French restaurant Pétrus has been at number one since March 2010.[6]
Former residents
From 1940, Gerald Hamilton, who had served prison sentences for bankruptcy, theft, gross indecency and being a threat to national security, and his jazzband leader lover Ken "Snakehips" Johnson lived at 91 Kinnerton Street.[9]
In the mid-1970s, the journalist and author Christopher Robbins lived with the film director Brian Desmond Hurst in his "grandly shabby Georgian house" in the street.[10]
No. 44 was owned by
References
- ^ OpenStreetMap. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-230-73878-2.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ISBN 0713401400
- ^ ISBN 978-0-19-162338-7.
- ^ a b "Brief history during Snow era". www.ph.ucla.edu.
- ^ Petrus. Retrieved 20 December 2020.
- ^ Historic England. "The Wilton Arms public house (1251180)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
- ^ "Wilton Arms, London". whatpub.com. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
- ISBN 978-0-7509-9583-2.
- ^ "Christopher Robbins | The Empress of Ireland". Slightly Foxed. 1 June 2020.
- ^ Ma, Alexandra. "We visited alleged Epstein 'madam' Ghislaine Maxwell's upscale house in London's Belgravia, where the superrich live, and got a taste of her lifestyle before she disappeared". Business Insider.
- ^ "Epstein's Drinkers & Drivers".
External links
Media related to Kinnerton Street at Wikimedia Commons