Text search
Related images
HistoryWorld
Link
Map Click the icons to visit linked content. Hover to see the search terms. |
| |
| | | | | | |
|
| 1703 |
| | Work begins on a house for Richard Hill, brother of Queen Anne's confidante Mrs Masham, which is named for two stone trumpeters either side of the portico | |
| |
|
| 1724 |
| | Work starts on Maids of Honour Row, four magnificent houses commissioned as lodgings for the ladies-in-waiting to the Princess of Wales | |
| |
|
| 1738 |
| | John Christopher builds the ‘Star and Garter’ tavern at the top of Petersham Common | |
| |
|
| c. 1760 |
| | Asgill House, designed by Robert Taylor, is completed for Sir Charles Asgill, recently the Lord Mayor of London (1757-8) | |
| |
|
| 1760 |
| | A new theatre opens in Richmond, with a prologue written for the occasion by David Garrick | |
| |
|
| 1774 April |
| | A tontine is launched in Richmond to raise money for the construction of a bridge across the Thames | |
| | Richmond Bridge, c.1850 Guildhall Library
|
|
|
| 1777 January |
| | Richmond Bridge, designed by James Paine and Kenton Couse, opens to traffic (and is now the oldest bridge in London) | |
| |
|
| c. 1803 |
| | James Brewer doubles the site and establishes the Star and Garter as a major hotel | |
| |
|
| c. 1813 |
| | A copper beech is planted in the garden of Asgill House, which survives into the twenty-first century in good health and at a magnificent size | |
| | Asgill House and its famous copper beech (BG)
|
|
|
| 1822 |
| | Under Joseph Ellis the Star and Garter hotel expands still further to become the fashionable watering place for royalty and literary figures, including later in the century Dickens and Thackeray | |
| |
|
| | | | |
|