Pembroke House

"The Opening of Waterloo Bridge", 1832, by John Constable[1]

Pembroke House, located on Whitehall, was the London residence of the earls of Pembroke.

History

It was built by the architect earl Henry Herbert in 1723–24 (under Colen Campbell and latterly his assistant Roger Morris), on ground leased by the earl in 1717 and 1729 amidst the ruins of the parts of Whitehall Palace that burned down in 1698 (and still covered in its rubble). Its design inspired the 9th earl's designs for Marble Hill House. The 9th earl died here in 1733, as did his great-grandson the 11th Earl, in 1827.

It was the subject of a major rebuild by the 10th Earl in 1756–59, and in 1762 Lady Hervey wrote that it was "taken for the Duc de Nivernois, the French Ambassador". Gardens were created in 1818 by demolishing the house's riding-house and stables, and the main floor-level terrace (including the portion over the water-gate) was retained. The lease was repeatedly renewed (passing to the Earl of Harrington) until in or around 1853, when the land and house became crown freehold (housing the Ministry of Transport c.1930, and later parts of what would become the Ministry of Defence). It was demolished to build the current MOD building in 1938.

Notes

  1. Constable visited the terrace of Pembroke House in 1826 and painted the views from its riverside terrace in preparation for this painting, and it may be the house at extreme left, to the left of the tree (although this may also Michael Angelo Taylor's House).

Bibliography

See also

Coordinates: 51°30′15″N 0°07′29″W / 51.5042°N 0.1247°W / 51.5042; -0.1247

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