Apsley House
Apsley House is the London townhouse of the Dukes of Wellington. It stands alone at Hyde Park Corner, on the south-east corner of Hyde Park, facing south towards the busy traffic roundabout in the centre of which stands the Wellington Arch. It is a Grade I listed building.
Apsley House | |
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The front of Apsley House in 2005 | |
Location within Central London | |
General information | |
Architectural style | Neo-classical |
Location | 149 Piccadilly London, W1 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Coordinates | 51°30′12″N 0°09′05″W |
Client | |
Design and construction | |
Architect |
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Website | |
Official website | |
Listed Building – Grade I | |
Reference no. | 1226873[1] |
It is sometimes referred to as the Wellington Museum, its official designation under a 1947 Act of Parliament. The house is now run by English Heritage and is open to the public as a museum and art gallery, exhibiting the Wellington Collection, a large collection of paintings, other artworks and memorabilia of the career of the 1st Duke. The 9th Duke of Wellington retains the use of part of the buildings. It is perhaps the only preserved example of an English aristocratic townhouse from its period. The practice has been to maintain the rooms as far as possible in the original style and decor.
History
Apsley House stands at the site of an old lodge that belonged to the crown. During the Interregnum newer buildings were erected between what is now Old Park Lane and Hyde Park Corner. In the 1600s after the Restoration they were leased by James Hamilton (died 1673) and renewed by Elizabeth his widow in 1692 on a 99-year lease (Hamilton Place takes its name from that family). Immediately before Apsley House was built the site was occupied by a tavern called the Hercules Pillars (immortalised by Henry Fielding in The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling as the location where Squire Western resides when he first journeys up to London).[2]
The house was originally built in red brick by Robert Adam between 1771 and 1778 for Lord Apsley, the Lord Chancellor, who gave the house its name. Some Adam interiors survive: the Piccadilly Drawing Room with its apsidal end and Adam fireplace, and the Portico Room, behind the giant Corinthian portico added by Wellington.
The house was given the popular nickname of Number One, London, since it was the first house passed by visitors who travelled from the countryside after the toll gates at Knightsbridge.[3] It was originally part of a contiguous line of great houses on Piccadilly, demolished to widen Park Lane: its official address remains 149 Piccadilly, W1J 7NT.[4]
In 1807 the house was purchased by Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley, the elder brother of Sir Arthur Wellesley, but in 1817 financial difficulties forced him to sell it to his famous brother, by then the Duke of Wellington, who needed a London base from which to pursue his new career in politics.
Wellington employed the architect Benjamin Dean Wyatt to carry out renovations in two phases: in the first, begun in 1819, he added a three-storey extension to the north east, housing a State Dining Room, bedrooms and dressing rooms.[5] The second phase, started after Wellington had become Prime Minister in 1828, included a new staircase and the "Waterloo Gallery" on the west side of the house.[5] The red-brick exterior was clad in Bath stone, and a pedimented portico added.[6] Wyatt's original estimate for the work was £23,000, but the need to repair structural defects discovered during the work led to costs escalating to more than £61,000.[5] Wyatt introduced his own version of French style to the interior, notably in the Waterloo Gallery and the florid wrought iron stair-rail, described by Pevsner as "just turning from Empire to a neo-Rococo".
The Waterloo Gallery is named after the Duke's famous victory over Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo. The Waterloo Banquet was held annually to commemorate the famous victory of 18 June 1815. The first banquets were held in the Dining Room but in 1828 when Wyatt completed the Waterloo Gallery the banquet was moved there and became a much larger event, seating 74 as opposed to 36 in the dining room. The Duke's equestrian statue can be seen across the busy road, cloaked and watchful, the plinth guarded at each corner by an infantryman. This statue was cast from guns captured at the battle.
Gerald Wellesley, 7th Duke of Wellington, gave the house and its most important contents to the nation in 1947, but by the Wellington Museum Act 1947 the right of the family to occupy just over half the house was preserved "so long as there is a Duke of Wellington".[7] The family apartments are now on the north side of the house, concentrated on the second floor.
Gallery
- Apsley House in 1829 by TH Shepherd. The main gateway to Hyde Park can be glimpsed on the left.
- The statue of the Duke of Wellington facing Apsley House. Hyde Park Corner to the left.
- Apsley House at night
- Portrait of Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington by Thomas Lawrence, hanging in Apsley House
- Antonio Canova's Napoleon as Mars the Peacemaker, 1806, statue in Apsley House
- Diego Velázquez's Waterseller of Seville, 1623, in Apsley House
See also
- Stratfield Saye House – the country home of the Dukes of Wellington
- Waterloo ceremony
Notes
- Historic England. "Apsley House (1226873)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
- Knight, Charles, ed. (1851), Knight's cyclopædia of London, London, p. 789
- Aspley House (English Heritage) accessed 13 March 2009
- 149 Piccadilly, W1J 7NT – Google Maps
- "Arthur Wellesley and Benjamin Wyatt". English Heritage. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
- Timbs, John (1858). Curiosities of London. London. p. 541.
- Nicolson, Adam. "Heritage held hostage to class war". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
References
- Jervis, Simon and Tomlin, Maurice (revised by Voak, Jonathon) (1984, revisions 1989 & 1995) Apsley House Wellington Museum published by the Trustees of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London ISBN 1-85177-161-1
- Nikolaus Pevsner, The Buildings of England: London vol. I, p 463. ISBN 0-300-09653-4
- Stourton, James (2012). Great Houses of London (Hardback). London: Frances Lincoln. ISBN 978-0-7112-3366-9.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Apsley House. |
- Official website
- Apsley House – English Heritage website
- Historical Images of Apsley House
- Apsley House and Park Lane, Old and New London: Volume 4 (1878), pp. 359–375