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The Parish of St John’s Smith Square

23 May 2011 By Caroline Shenton

More strolling round Westminster of a lunchtime, on the way back from Pret (mine’s a Hoisin Duck wrap, a mango pot and diet coke, since you’re asking).  I like finding pockets of the borough which are pretty much as they would have been in 1834 (except for the cars) …

 

First up, Lord North St, looking towards St John’s, Smith Square. 
The St John’s parish engine was one of the first on the scene of the fire.
 
Fancy railings outside well-to-do townhouse in
Lord North Street

 

St John’s, Smith Square, famously known as “The Footstool”
because Queen Anne apocryphally kicked one over when asked

by the architect Thomas Archer what it should look like

(four towers at each corner sticking up in the air).  Nice restaurant, too!

 
More modest dwellings on Gayfere Street – I love the wonky
line of the windows and door frames of the terrace.

 

Looks respectable enough today: St Margaret’s
Church, the next parish along from St John’s.  But at
the time of the 1834 fire, this green lawn was a graveyard
and well-known cruising ground, where William Bankes MP
was caught with a soldier called Private Flowers

 

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Filed Under: Historic Westminster, The 1834 Fire

About Caroline Shenton

Dr Caroline Shenton is an archivist and historian. She was formerly Director of the Parliamentary Archives in London, and before that was a senior archivist at the National Archives. Her book The Day Parliament Burned Down won the Political Book of the Year Award in 2013 and Mary Beard called it 'microhistory at its absolute best' while Dan Jones considered it 'glorious'. Its acclaimed sequel, Mr Barryís War, about the rebuilding of the Palace of Westminster, was a Book of the Year in 2016 for The Daily Telegraph and BBC History Magazine and was described by Lucy Worsley as 'a real jewel, finely wrought and beautiful'. During 2017 Caroline was Political Writer in Residence at Gladstone's Library.

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About Caroline

Dr Caroline Shenton is an archivist and historian. Her book The Day Parliament Burned Down won the Political Book of the Year Award in 2013. Read More…

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