Cheyne Walk - Famous Residents

Famous Residents

Many famous people have lived (and continue to live) in the Walk:

  • Keith Richards lived at number 3, which in 1945 became a National Trust property housing the Benton Fletcher collection of keyboard instruments.
  • 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.
  • Ralph Vaughan Williams lived at number 13 from 1905 to 1928. There he wrote works including his first three symphonies, the Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, The Lark Ascending, and Hugh the Drover.
  • 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) from 1862 to 1882 …
  • and so did Algernon Charles Swinburne.
  • Thomas Attwood (composer) (1765-1838) lived at No 17 for some years up to his death in 1838. He was organist at St Paul's Cathedral from 1796, and of the Chapel Royal from 1836. He was a pupil of Mozart. Thomas Attwood is buried in the crypt of St Paul's underneath the organ.
  • No 18 was renowned for being the home of the curious museum (knackatory) and tavern known as Don Saltero's Coffee House. The proprietor was James Salter, who was for many years the servant of Sir Hans Sloane.
  • Sir Hans Sloane’s manor house, demolished in 1760, stood at numbers 19–26.
  • James Clerk Maxwell lived at 41 while lecturing at King's College London in the early 1860s. He used the iron railings outside his home in two experiments on electro-magnetic fields, much to the dismay of friends and foreigners.
  • James Abbott McNeill Whistler lived at numbers 21 (1890–92), 72 (? to his death there in 1903), 96 (1866–78) and 101 (1863) at different times.
  • Edward Arthur Walton lived at number 21.
  • Erskine Childers lived at 20 Carlyle Mansions with his family, and wrote his novel The Riddle of the Sands there as well. He also lived at 16 Cheyne Gardens for several years.
  • Nicolaus Ludwig, Imperial Count von Zinzendorf und Pottendorf, and the Brethren of the Moravian Church renovated Lindsey House at numbers 99–100 in Cheyne Walk in the mid-18th century; it was for a number of years the headquarters of their worldwide missionary activity. Moravian Close nearby is still the London God's Acre, where many famous Moravians are buried.
  • Mortimer Menpes, the watercolourist and etcher, shared a flat with Whistler.
  • Henry James spent his last years at number 21.
  • Mick Jagger and Marianne Faithfull lived at number 48 in 1968.
  • The chemist Charles Hatchett, the poet William Bell Scott, and the anatomist John Marshall lived at Belle Vue House, number 92.
  • Elizabeth Gaskell was born at number 93.
  • Diana Mitford lived at number 96 with her first husband Bryan Guinness in 1932.
  • Sir Marc Brunel, who designed the Thames Tunnel, lived at number 98 …
  • as did his son Isambard Kingdom Brunel.
  • Hilaire Belloc lived at number 104, as did the artist Walter Greaves
  • John Tweed, sculptor and friend of Auguste Rodin, lived at number 108.
  • Sir Philip Steer lived at number 109.
  • J.M.W. Turner died at number 119 in 1851.
  • Sylvia Pankhurst lived at number 120 after leaving university.
  • John Paul Getty II lived here from the late 1970s to the early 1990s.
  • George Weidenfeld, publisher, now Lord Weidenfeld of Chelsea, has lived here since the 1960s.
  • George Best once had a flat here.
  • Shapur Kharegat, journalist, editor and former Asia Director of The Economist lived at 17 Carlyle Mansions from 1947 until 1964.
  • Laurence Olivier and Jill Esmond lived here in the 1930s.
  • Charles Edward Mudie English publisher and founder of Mudie's Lending Library was born 1818 in Cheyne Walk; where his father owned a Circulating library, stationery & book binding business at No. 89.
  • Mary Sidney lived at Crosby Hall from 1609 to 1615
  • In July 1972, during a short-lived ceasefire, an IRA delegation that included Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness held talks in a house in Cheyne Walk with a British government team led by NI Secretary William Whitelaw.
  • Lionel Davidson lived at Carlyle Mansions from 1976 - 1984, where he wrote The Chelsea Murders, a CWA Gold Dagger winner.
  • The Old Cheyneans – former pupils of Sloane Grammar School, Hortensia Road, Chelsea – take their name from the association with Cheyne Walk and Sir Hans Sloane who lived there.

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Famous quotes containing the words famous and/or residents:

    Lizzie Borden took an axe
    And gave her mother forty whacks;
    When she saw what she had done,
    She gave her father forty-one.
    —Anonymous. Late 19th century ballad.

    The quatrain refers to the famous case of Lizzie Borden, tried for the murder of her father and stepmother on Aug. 4, 1892, in Fall River, Massachusetts. Though she was found innocent, there were many who contested the verdict, occasioning a prodigious output of articles and books, including, most recently, Frank Spiering’s Lizzie (1985)

    Most of the folktales dealing with the Indians are lurid and romantic. The story of the Indian lovers who were refused permission to wed and committed suicide is common to many places. Local residents point out cliffs where Indian maidens leaped to their death until it would seem that the first duty of all Indian girls was to jump off cliffs.
    —For the State of Iowa, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)