NOTES: Bedford Square, built between 1775 and 1783, was the first square to have been planned on the London estate of the fifth Duke of Bedford and is the last complete Georgian Square in Bloomsbury. Thomas Leverton designed this house for its first occupier, Sir Lionel Lyde, Bart., in 1778-1782.
NOTES: Bedford Square, built between 1775 and 1783, was the first square to have been planned on the London estate of the fifth Duke of Bedford and is the last complete Georgian Square in Bloomsbury. Number 41 was once home to the architect William Butterfield and the novelist Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins.
NOTES: Bedford Square, built between 1775 and 1783, was the first square to have been planned on the London estate of the fifth Duke of Bedford and is the last complete Georgian Square in Bloomsbury.
NOTES: Founded in the 12th century, this church is often called the 'Cathedral of the Cotswolds'. The chancel survives from the 13th and 14th centuries while the south porch giving access to the market square, was added in 1490. The remodelling of the church in Perpendicular style was completed in 1520. The church was fully restored by Sir George Gilbert Scott in 1865-1867.