Cheyne Walk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cheyne Walk (pronounced Chaynee) is an historic street in Chelsea, a bit of "picturesque old London". Most of the houses were built in the early eighteenth century. Before the construction in the nineteenth century of the busy Thames Embankment, which now runs in front of it, the houses fronted the River Thames.
Today, Cheyne Walk forms part of the A3212 and A3220 trunk roads; it extends eastwards from the southern end of Finborough Road past the Battersea and Albert Bridges, after which the A3212 becomes Chelsea Embankment.
From February 19 2007, this road will mark the boundary of the extended London Congestion Charge Zone.
East of the Walk are the gardens of the Apothecaries' Company, with their famous cedars.
[edit] Famous residents
Many famous people have lived (and continue to live) in the Walk.
- Keith Richards lived at number 3.
- George Eliot spent the last three weeks of her life at number 4.
- David Lloyd George lived at number 10. Gerald Scarfe now lives there.
- The landscape painter Cecil Gordon Lawson lived at number 15 (a number of his works still hang there)...
- ... as did the engraver Henry Thomas Ryall...
- ... and the Allason family, well-known for their political and literary influence
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti lived at number 16 (where he was banned from keeping peacocks due to the noise)...
- ... and so did Algernon Charles Swinburne
- Sir Hans Sloane’s manor house, demolished in 1760, stood at numbers 19–26
- James McNeill Whistler lived at numbers 21, 96 and 101 (at different times, of course)
- Henry James spent his last years at number 21
- Mick Jagger lived at number 48
- Elizabeth Gaskell was born at number 93.
- Sir Marc Brunel who designed the Thames Tunnel lived at number 98 ...
- ... as did his son Isambard Kingdom Brunel
- Sir Philip Steer lived at number 109.
- J.M.W. Turner died at number 119 in 1851.