Street names of Mayfair

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of the etymology of street names in the London district of Mayfair, in the City of Westminster. It utilises the generally accepted boundaries of Mayfair viz. Marble Arch/Cumberland Gate and Oxford Street to the north, Regent Street to the east, Piccadilly to the south and Park Lane to the west.

  • Achilles Way – after the nearby Wellington as Achilles statue in Hyde Park[1]
  • Adam's Row – believed to be after John Adams, local land agent in the 18th century[2][3]
  • Air Street – believed to be a corruption of ‘Ayres’, after Thomas Ayre, a local brewer and resident in the 17th century[4][5]
  • Albany and Albany Courtyard – after Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany, who in 1791 purchased Melbourne House which stood on this site[4][5]
  • Albemarle Street – after the Christopher Monck, 2nd Duke of Albemarle, owner of Clarendon House which stood on this site in the late 17th century[4][6]
  • Aldford Street – after Aldford, a property on the Grosvenor family's Cheshire estates; it was formerly known as Chapel Street before 1886, as it led to the Grosvenor Chapel[7][8]
  • Archibald Mews – unknown; it was formerly John Court, after local landowner John, Lord Berkeley[9]
  • Audley Square, North Audley Street and South Audley Street – after Mary Davies, heiress to Hugh Audley, who married Sir Thomas Grosvenor, thereby letting the local land fall into the Grosvenors' ownership[10][11]
  • Avery Row – after Henry Avery, 18th century bricklayer who built this street over the Tyburn Brook,[12] or possibly after Ebury, the ancient manor here[13]
  • Balderton Street – after local landowners the Grosvenors, who also owned land in Balderton, Cheshire; formerly George Street[14][15]
  • Balfour Mews and Balfour Place – after Eustace Balfour, surveyor for the Grosvenor estate 1890 – 1910[16]
  • Barlow Place – after either Thomas Barlow, builder and surveyor for the Grosvenor estate in the early 18th century[17] or Arthur Balfour, politician and later Prime Minister in the early 20th century[18]
  • Berkeley Square and Berkeley Street – Berkeley House formerly stood here, home of John Berkeley, 3rd Baron Berkeley of Stratton in the late 17th century[19][20]
  • Binney Street – after Reverend Thomas Binney, local 19th century minister; formerly called Bird Street[21][22][23]
  • Blenheim Street – after Blenheim Palace, owned by John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, 17th – 18th century general[24][25]
  • Blackburne's Mews – after William Blackburne, local resident in the early 18th century[26][27]
  • Bloomfield Place – John Newson, who built the adjacent Bloomfield Flats, named them for his wife's maiden name[28]
  • Bolton Street – after Charles Powlett, Duke of Bolton, who owned this land when the street was built in 1699[29][30]
  • Bourdon Place and Bourdon Street – after the former Bourdon House, home of the Bourdon/Burden family in the early 18th century[31][32]
  • Boyle Street – after Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, local landowner in the 18th century[33][34]
  • Brick Street – this area was formerly a set of fields used for digging brick-earth[35][36]
  • Broadbent Street – after William Broadbent, physician to the royal family in the Victorian and Edwardian period, who lived nearby[37][38]
  • Brook Gate, Brook Street, Brook's Mews and Upper Brook Street – Brook Street marks the path of the former Tyburn Brook[39][40]
  • Brown Hart Gardens – this was formerly two streets prior to 1936 – Brown Street, after 18th century local bricklayer John Brown, and Hart Street, probably after a local inn or resident[41][42]
  • Bruton Lane, Bruton Place and Bruton Street – after Bruton, Somerset, where John Berkeley, 3rd Baron Berkeley of Stratton owned land[43][20]
  • Burlington Arcade, Burlington Gardens, New Burlington Mews, New Burlington Place, New Burlington Street and Old Burlington Street – after the local Burlington estate, property of the earls of Burlington[44][45]
  • Carlos Place – after Carlos I of Portugal; it was formerly Charles Street but was renamed in 1886 to avoid confusion with other streets of this name[46][47]
  • Carpenter Street
  • Carrington Street – after 18th century local landowner Nathan Carrington[48][49]
  • Charles Street – after a Charles in the family of John Berkeley, 3rd Baron Berkeley of Stratton[50][20]
  • Chesterfield Gardens, Chesterfield Hill and Chesterfield Street – after Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield, who owned a mansion nearby in the 18th century[51][52]
  • Clarges Mews and Clarges Street – after William (or Thomas) Clarges, local landowner in the 17th century[53][54]
  • Clifford Street – after Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, also Baron Clifford, after his ancestor Elizabeth Clifford[55][56]
  • Coach and Horses Yard – after the Burlington Arms pub here, formerly the Coach and Horses[57][58]
  • Conduit Street – after a former water conduit here leading to the city and owned by the Corporation of London from the 15th century[59][60]
  • Cork Street and Cork Street Mews – after Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, also 4th Earl of Cork[61][62]
  • Culross Street – thought to be after Culross in Fife; prior to 1899 it was Northrop Street, after a Welsh property owned by the Grosvenor family[63]
  • Cumberland Gate – after Prince William, Duke of Cumberland, brother of George III; it was formerly Tyburn Gate, after the Tyburn Brook[63][64]
  • Curzon Gate, Curzon Square and Curzon Street – after Nathaniel Curzon (and his family), local landowner in the 18th century[65][66]
  • Davies Mews and Davies Street – after Mary Davies, heiress to Hugh Audley, who married Sir Thomas Grosvenor, thereby letting the local land fall into the Grosvenors' ownership[67][68]
  • Deanery Mews and Deanery Street – this land was owned by Westminster Abbey in the 18th century; it was formerly known as Dean and Chapter Street[67][69]
  • Derby Street – after Derbyshire, home county of local landowners the Curzon family[70][66]
  • Dering Street and Dering Yard – unknown[71]
  • Down Street and Down Street Mews – after John Downes, local bricklayer in the 18th century[72][73]
  • Dover Street and Dover Yard – after Henry Jermyn, 1st Baron Dover, local leaseholder in the late 17th century[72][74]
  • Duke Street and Duke Yard – it is unknown precisely which duke, if any, this street commemorates[75]
  • Dunraven Street – after Windham Thomas Wyndham-Quin, 4th Earl of Dunraven and Mount-Earl, politician and soldier who lived near here[76][77]
  • Farm Street – this street was formerly part of Hay Hill farm[78][79]
  • Fitzmaurice Place – after John FitzMaurice, father of William Petty, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne who lived near here in the 18th century[80][81]
  • George Yard – probably after John George, local 18th century glazier and builder[82][83]
  • Gilbert Street – unknown; formerly James Street[22][84]
  • Globe Yard
  • Grafton Street – after the Dukes of Grafton, who owned a town house near here in the 18th century[85][86]
  • Grantham Place – after John (or Thomas) Grantham, local builder in the 18th century[87][88]
  • Green Street – after John Green, local builder of the 18th century[89][90]
  • Grosvenor Gate, Grosvenor Hill, Grosvenor Square, Grosvenor Street and Upper Grosvenor Street – after the Grosvenors, former local landowners[11]
  • Half Moon Street – after a former inn near here of this name[91][92]
  • Hamilton Mews and Hamilton Place – built on land belonging to Mr Hamilton, ranger of Hyde Park during the reign King Charles II[93][94]
  • Hanover Square and Hanover Street – after the House of Hanover, reigning dynasty when the square and street were built in 1713[95][96]
  • Harewood Place – after Ahrwood House, residence of the Earls of Harewood in the 19th century[97]
  • Haunch of Venison Yard – after a former 18th century inn near here[98][99]
  • Hay Hill, Hay's Mews and Hill Street – after the Hay Hill farm which formerly stood here; the farm was originally ‘Aye farm’, after the nearby Aye Brook[100][99]
  • Heddon Street – after William Pulteney (later also Baron Heddon), local 18th century landowner[101][102]
  • Hertford Street – after a former local inn named after the Seymours, Marquesses of Hertford[103][104]
  • Jervis Court
  • Jones Street – after William Jones, yeoman, who leased a large plot here in 1723[105]
  • Lancashire Court
  • Lansdowne Row – former site of Lansdowne House, home of William Petty, 1st Marquess of Lansdowne in the 18th century[80][106]
  • Lees Place – after either Robert Lee (or Lees), owner of the Two Chairman pub which formerly stood here[107] or one Thomas Barrett of Lee, Kent, 19th century builder[108]
  • Lumley Street – after Sibell Lumley, wife of Victor, Earl Grosvenor, local landowner[109][110]
  • Lynsey Way
  • Maddox Street – after the local Maddox estate, purchased by William Maddox in the 1620s[111][112]
  • Marble Arch – after the Marble Arch erected here in 1851[113]
  • Market Mews – after the former Shepherd Market near here[114]
  • Mason's Arms Mews – after the nearby Mason's Arms pub[115]
  • Mayfair Place – after the May Fair that was formerly held here in the 17th – 18th centuries[116]
  • Mill Street – after a windmill that formerly stood here next to the Tyburn brook[117][118]
  • Mount Row, Mount Street and Mount Street Mews – built over the former Mount Field, from the former Oliver's Mount fortification built here by Oliver Cromwell during the English Civil War[119][120]
  • New Bond Street, Old Bond Street and Upper Bond Street – after Thomas Bond, member of the consortium that developed the local area in the late 17th century; ‘New’ comes from the extension of the then ‘Bond Street’ northwards in the early 18th century[44][121]
  • North Row – after its location as the northernmost street on the Grosvenor estate[122][123]
  • Oxford Circus and Oxford Street – after Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer who owned much of the local estate; prior to this it was known as Tyburn Road, as it led to the Tyburn gibbet at what is now Marble Arch. Circus is a British term for a road junction; it was formerly Regent Circus, after Regent Street[124][125]
  • Park Lane, Old Park Lane and Park Street – after the nearby Hyde Park; Park Lane was formerly Tyburn Lane, after the Tyburn gibbet and stream, and Park Street was formerly Hyde Park Street[126][127]
  • Piccadilly, Piccadilly Circus and Piccadilly Place – after Piccadilly Hall, home of local tailor Robert Baker in the 17th century, believed to be named after the pickadils (collars/hem trimmings) which made his fortune. Circus is a British term for a road junction; it was laid out by John Nash in 1819[128][129]
  • Pitt's Head Mews – after a former pub on this site called the Pitt's Head, thought to be named after William Pitt the Elder[130][131]
  • Pollen Street – after the Pollen family, who inherited the estate from the Maddox family[132][112]
  • Princes Street – named in a generic sense in honour of the then reigning House of Hanover[133][96]
  • Providence Court – unknown[134]
  • Queen Street – when it was built in 1735 there was no reigning queen, so to which queen it refers, if any, is unknown[135][136]
  • Red Lion Yard
  • Red Place – coined in Victorian times after the colour of the local buildings[137][138]
  • Reeves Mews – after Spelsant Reeves, local leaseholder in the 18th century[137][139]
  • Regent Street – made in the 1810s by John Nash and named after the Prince Regent, later George IV[137][140]
  • Rex Place – formerly King's Mews, it was renamed after the Latin term for ‘king’[141][142]
  • Royal Arcade – after Queen Victoria, who visited this arcade[143]
  • Sackville Street – after Captain Edward Sackville, tenant of a house on the west side of the street in 1675; it was formerly known as Stone Conduit Close[144][145]
  • Saddle Yard
  • St Anselm's Place – former site of St Anselm's church, demolished 1938[146][147]
  • St George Street – originally George Street, after George I, reigning monarch when the street was built; the ‘St’ was later added to link it to the nearby St George's church[148][149]
  • Savile Row – after Dorothy Savile, Countess of Burlington and Countess of Cork, wife of Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, local landowner[150][151][152]
  • Sedley Place – named after Angelo Sedley, local 19th century furniture salesman[153][154]
  • Shepherd Close, Shepherd Market, Shepherd Place and Shepherd Street – after Edward Shepherd, local builder in the 18th century; Shepherd Place was built by his brother John Shepherd[155][114]
  • South Molton Lane and South Molton Street – unknown; South Molton Lane was formerly Poverty Lane[156]
  • South Street – after its location as the southernmost street on the Grosvenor estate[156]
  • Stafford Street – after Margaret Stafford, local leaseholder in the late 17th century[157][158]
  • Stanhope Gate and Stanhope Row – after Philip Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield, who owned a mansion nearby in the 18th century[159][52]
  • Stratton Street – after John Berkeley, 3rd Baron Berkeley of Stratton, local resident in the late 17th century[160][20]
  • Swallow Passage, Swallow Place and Swallow Street – after a field on this site owned by Thomas Swallow in the 1530s[161][162]
  • Tentereden Street – unknown[163]
  • Three Kings Yard – after a nearby inn, demolished 1879[164][165]
  • Tilney Street – after either John Tilney (or Tylney), who was granted this land in the 18th century[166] or Ann Tilney, 18th century property owner; it was formerly Tripe Yard, after the butchery trade here[167]
  • Trebeck Street – after Reverend Trebeck, former rector of St George's on Hanover Square in the 18th century[166][168]
  • Tyburn Way – formerly the site of the Tyburn gallows, itself named after a deserted hamlet called Tiburne in the Domesday Book, meaning ‘boundary stream’[169][170]
  • Union Yard
  • Vigo Street – after either the British victory at the Battle of Vigo Bay in 1702[171][172][173] or the capture of a Spanish vessel of this name in 1719[174]
  • Vine Street – after The Vine, an 18th-century public house,[175] which in turn may have been named after a vineyard that existed at this location in Roman times[176]
  • Waverton Street – after Waverton, Cheshire, where local landowners the Grosvenors also held land[177][15]
  • Weighhouse Street – after the King's Weigh House Chapel, which moved here its site above the King's Weight House in the City in 1891; before this it was known as Robert Street, after Robert Grosvenor, 1st Marquess of Westminster, and before that as Chandler Street after the local chandler trade[177][23]
  • White Horse Street – after a former inn of this name at this site, named for the Royal emblem of the House of Hanover[178][179]
  • Wood's Mews – after Richard Wood, who built this street in 1731[24][180]
  • Woodstock Street – after either Woodstock, Oxfordshire, location of to Blenheim Palace, home of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, 17th – 18th century general[24] or Thomas Woodstock, 18th century builder[180]
  • Yarmouth Place – after Francis Charles Seymour-Conway, 3rd Marquess of Hertford, Earl of Yarmouth who lived near here in the 19th century[181][182]

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  172. ^ Hibbert, Christopher; Ben Weinreb; John Keay; Julia Keay (2010). The London encyclopaedia. London: Pan Macmillan. p. 976. ISBN 978-0-230-73878-2.
  173. ^ Wittich, John (1996). Discovering London street names. 3rd edition. Princes Risborough: Shire Publications. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-7478-0309-6.
  174. ^ Bebbington 1972, p. 332.
  175. ^ "Vine Street". Conveyancing Data Services. 24 March 2015. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  176. ^ Moore 2003, p. 147.
  177. ^ Jump up to: a b Fairfield, S. The Streets of London – A dictionary of the names and their origins, p335
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  180. ^ Jump up to: a b Bebbington 1972, p. 350.
  181. ^ Fairfield, S. The Streets of London – A dictionary of the names and their origins, p349
  182. ^ Bebbington 1972, p. 352.

Sources

  • Bebbington, Gillian (1972). London Street Names. BT Batsford. ISBN 978-0-333-28649-4.
  • Fairfield, Sheila (1983). The Streets Of London: A Dictionary Of The Names And Their Origins. Papermac.*Moore, Tim (2003). Do Not Pass Go. Vintage. ISBN 978-0-099-43386-6.
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