Orme Square
Urban square in Bayswater, London From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Urban square in Bayswater, London From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Orme Square is a private square in Bayswater, London, England, off the north side of Bayswater Road and on the north-west corner of Hyde Park, overlooking Kensington Gardens whose Orme Gate entrance takes its name from the square.
It was set out and first occupied between 1820 and 1826 in the environs of Kensington Palace and was one of the first developments beyond Tyburn (the present Marble Arch) which then marked the western rim of London. It therefore contains several of the oldest houses in Bayswater including five Grade II listed buildings (1, 2, 3, 10 and 11). A comprehensive history of the houses and their occupants including those cited below [1] is lodged with Westminster City Archives.
The square (originally known as Ormes Square) is named after the British engraver, painter, publisher of illustrated books, and property developer Edward Orme (1775-1848) who bought the land in 1820 and who, in partnership with a builder, Wright Ingle, created a dozen homes in Regency style but in different configurations.
Two terraces each of three houses face the park while, within the square around a carriageway and central garden, two semidetached houses stand to the west with two more to the south and a standalone villa to the east. Another detached house had been added to the west by 1830. According to rate books Nos.1 and 3 were already occupied by 1826 and No.2 by 1827.[2]
In the late 1940s, after the north-west of the square was bombed during the Blitz, a thirteenth house was inserted to the west.
Numbers 1 and 2, originally modest houses, acquired a classical facade, probably in the late 1860s.
The square features a distinctive double Tuscan column topped by a bird facing the entrance to the Orme Gate in Kensington Gardens. Over the years, the statue has sparked controversy, with different interpretations suggesting it could represent an eagle, a phoenix, or a falcon.
There has been some confusion about early residents, partly because street names changed frequently and house numbers were absent or informal until 1855. Wrong attributions include the forger Henry Fauntleroy (1794-1824) who had died before Orme Square was first occupied, and Charles Hall, Vice-Chancellor of England who lived in a grand house close by at 8 Bayswater Hill but not at 8 Orme Square. Leopold Canning, 4th Baron Garvagh (1878–1956) was also wrongly said to have been a resident although his wife, Lady Garvagh, lived there for a decade after his death in 1915.
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