St Peter's Square, London Explained

St Peter's Square, in Hammersmith, London, England, is a garden square laid out in the 1820s, just north of the River Thames between the Great West Road (A4) and King Street, within the St Peter's Square Conservation Area and London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham.

Locale

The limit of Chiswick (thus now also the London Borough of Hounslow) is the westernmost garden fences where there is a lane called British Grove. St Peter's Church, Hammersmith, the substantial Grecian Ionic structure that was completed in 1829[1] occupies the south eastern corner of the site and is opposite 22 St Peters Square, a Grade II listed architect's studio and office building, that was formerly Island Records headquarters and is now named Island Studios. The houses are a good example of 19th century squares architecture, with paired villas in classical style arranged around a central space. The square today is maintained by residents, in partnership with Hammersmith & Fulham Council.[2]

Garden

The public garden in the centre of the square is Grade II listed on the English Heritage Register of Historic Parks and Gardens and is excluding roads. In 1913, a proposal to build on the garden was abandoned after local protests. The land was bought by the Borough Council and in 1915 the garden was opened to the public. The centre of the garden is occupied by a sculpture, The Greek Runner, by Sir William Blake Richmond, which was erected in 1926.[2]

History

The square was laid out during the economic boom of the 1820s, when the then owner, George Scott decided to build a speculative housing development on part of his Ravenscourt Park estate and also provided the land for St Peter's Church, Hammersmith. From 1827 plots were developed piecemeal by builders who undertook to conform to the master plan. The square was mostly complete by the end of the 1830s. The houses are mostly built in groups of three, with stucco fronts, pediments and Ionic porches. Some retain eagles, lions and dogs as decoration. Numbers 1 to 6 were the first to be built and are the grandest in the square.[3]

Notable inhabitants

Previous notable inhabitants

Professional inhabitants

Filming at St Peter's Square

The Pumpkin Eater in 1963/4 was filmed on location at St Peter's Square. The director was Jack Clayton, the script was by Harold Pinter and the leading roles were played by Anne Bancroft and Peter Finch[6]

Many episodes of 1970s police series The Sweeney were filmed here, as well as Miss Potter, a 2006 Chris Noonan biopic of Beatrix Potter, I Capture The Castle, a 2003 film directed by Tim Fywell,[7] and Silent Witness, a BBC thriller series, which filmed in the Square in March 2010.[7]

External links

51.4919°N -0.244°W

Notes and References

  1. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=45297 Edward Walford British History Onlline Old and New London Volume 6 The Southern
  2. http://www.londongardenstrust.org/guides/hammersmith.htm Hammersmith
  3. The London Encyclopaedia. Papermac, 1993. .
  4. http://www.johnpiper.org.uk/Summary%20Biography.htm Summary Biography
  5. Web site: Simon Fenwick. Jean Clark. 10 May 1999. 20 August 2018. The Guardian.
  6. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0058500/locations The Pumpkin Eater locations
  7. http://www.lbhf.gov.uk/Images/Onlocationfinal_tcm21-117402.pdf On location