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Queen's Road, Richmond

The former Star and Garter Home at the southern end of Queen's Road on Richmond Hill
Houses in the street
Entrance to the former site of the American University
The Art Deco Queen's Court

Queen's Road is a street in Richmond in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, running southwestwards from Sheen Road up Richmond Hill until it meets the street of that name by the former Star and Garter Home.[1] It forms a section of the B353 road and runs roughly parallel to the edge of Richmond Park. Pesthouse Common, now an area of open space but previously the site of a plague house,[2] is located near the northern end of the street.

The street includes three schools – Christ's School which is a secondary school, and two primary schools, Marshgate Primary School and St Elizabeth's RC Primary School.[3] The former Richmond Theological College was the site of the Richmond American University from 1972 to 2022 until it relocated to Chiswick Park.

The street dates back until at least the eighteenth century, when it was a carriageway across common land in what was then largely rural Surrey. Historically named Black Horse Lane after a public house at the junction with Sheen Road, it gained its current name in the 1840s when, according to the Richmond Local History Society, it was "almost certainly" renamed in honour of Queen Victoria.[4] The street was improved from 1825 at the behest of Joseph Ellis, the owner of the Star and Garter Hotel, despite concerns from Richmond tradesman that his might mean that visitors would bypass the town when travelling to Richmond Hill.[5] Some of the street's older buildings, including the Grade II-listed Richmond Gate Hotel, are at its southern end.[6]

The more modern social housing of the Queen's Road Estate was developed between 1971 and 1983 by the Richmond Parish Lands Charity and designed by the architects Darbourne & Darke. The first phase of the estate was Grade II listed by Historic England in 2012.[7]

The history of the street was the subject of a Museum of Richmond exhibition in 2020/21. A digital version of the exhibition is still available to view online.[8]

References

  1. ^ Nairn and Pevsner p.374
  2. ^ Museum of Richmond p.7
  3. ^ Museum of Richmond p.18
  4. ^ Members of the Richmond Local History Society p.102
  5. ^ Walford p.381
  6. ^ Historic England (10 January 1950). "Richmond Gate Hotel (1249958)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
  7. ^ Historic England (6 July 2012). "Phase 1, Queen's Road Estate, Richmond upon Thames (1400339)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 5 February 2024.
  8. ^ "Queen's Road: 500 Years of History (online exhibition)". Museum of Richmond. 2021. Retrieved 14 February 2024.

Bibliography

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