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1703
 
Place or Object  
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 See in Google maps   
Trumpeters' House


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1724
 
Place or Object  
Work starts on Maids of Honour Row, four magnificent houses commissioned as lodgings for the ladies-in-waiting to the Princess of Wales See in Google maps   
Maids of Honour, Richmond


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1738
 
Place or Object  
John Christopher builds the ‘Star and Garter’ tavern at the top of Petersham Common See in Google maps   
c. 1760
 
Place or Object  
Asgill House, designed by Robert Taylor, is completed for Sir Charles Asgill, recently the Lord Mayor of London (1757-8) See in Google maps   
1760
 
Place or Object  
A new theatre opens in Richmond, with a prologue written for the occasion by David Garrick See in Google maps   
1774   April
 
Place or Object  
A tontine is launched in Richmond to raise money for the construction of a bridge across the Thames See in Google maps   
Richmond Bridge, c.1850
Guildhall Library
1777   January
 
Place or Object  
Richmond Bridge, designed by James Paine and Kenton Couse, opens to traffic (and is now the oldest bridge in London) See in Google maps   
c. 1803
 
Place or Object  
James Brewer doubles the site and establishes the Star and Garter as a major hotel See in Google maps   
c. 1813
 
Place or Object  
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 See in Google maps   
Asgill House and its famous copper beech (BG)

1822
 
Place or Object  
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 See in Google maps   
A Day's Pleasure at the Star and Garter, mezzotint 1842 (detail)


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