Clarendon House,
Picadilly
Claredon House, was a town mansion which
stood on Piccadilly in London, England from the
1660s to the 1680s. It was built for the
powerful politician Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of
Clarendon and was the grandest private London
residence of its era.Clarendon House was built
between that year and 1667 to designs by Roger
Pratt. It was set well back from the street
behind a courtyard. The central section had nine
bays and the two side wings were each three bays
wide. The house was built on the double pile
plan, meaning that it was two rooms deep, and
had two main storeys of roughly equal height.
There was a raised basement below and a tall
attic storey with dormer windows above. The roof
was flat and balustrated and topped with a
cupola. The style was typical of the English
fashion of the day, clearly influenced by
classical principals, symmetrical and
pedimented, but lacking any classical orders.
Little is known about the interior layout beyond
what can be surmised from the exterior, from
Pratt's other works, and from the conventions of
the time. It probably had a large top lit
central staircase hall and a series of state
apartments. It had 101 hearths.
Clarendon House was praised both by
contemporaries and by later architectural
critics. John Evelyn thought it was "the best
contriv'd, the most useful, graceful and
magnificent house in England". Three hundred
years later, John Summerson wrote: "Clarendon
House was among the first great classical houses
to be built in London and easily the most
striking of them." It was to prove an
influential model for future English houses, but
its impact was felt much more in the design of
country houses than London mansions. Belton
House in Lincolnshire, which is sometimes said
to be the exemplar of the English country house,
was closely based on Clarendon House.
In 1667, the same year that his house was
finished, Clarendon fell from favour. His image
had not been helped by the grandeur of his
mansion, which is believed to have cost around
£40,000. Among the many allegations against
him it was charged that he has appropriated
stone intended for repairs to St. Paul's
Cathedral after the Great Fire to build his
house. That same year, on 14 June 1667, Samuel
Pepys recorded in his diary: "...some rude
people have been... at my Lord Clarendon's where
they cut down the trees before his house and
broke his windows." In response to the
allegations, the King abandoned his former
favourite. In 1667, Clarendon fled to France,
where he died in 1674.
In 1675, his heirs sold Clarendon House to
Christopher Monck, 2nd Duke of Albemarle for
£26,000, and in 1683, Albemarle resold it
to a consortium of investors led by Sir Thomas
Bond, the latter of whom demolished it and built
Dover Street, Albemarle Street, and Bond Street
on the site. Albemarle Street ran right through
the centre of the site of the house, which had
faced directly down St. James's Street.
This engraving is by T Spilbergh and engraved
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small stress tears to the folds and light
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