Russell Square

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Russell Square.

Russell Square is a large garden square in Bloomsbury, in the London Borough of Camden. It is near the University of London's main buildings and the British Museum. To the north is Woburn Place and to the south-east is Southampton Row. Russell Square tube station is nearby to the north-east.

Contents

[edit] History

Hotel Russell, at 1–8 Russell Square.

The square is named after the surname of the Earls and Dukes of Bedford, who developed the family's London landholdings in the 17th and 18th centuries, beginning with Covent Garden (Bedford Street). Russell Square was formed when new streets were laid out by the Duke on the site of the gardens of his former home Bedford House, their London house. Other local street names relating to the Duke of Bedford include Bedford Square, Bedford Place, Bedford Avenue, Bedford Row and Bedford Way; Woburn Square and Woburn Place (from Woburn Abbey); Tavistock Square, Tavistock Place and Tavistock Street (Marquess of Tavistock), and Thornhaugh Street (after a subsidiary title Baron of Thornhaugh). The street lamps around this area carry the Bedford Arms.

The square contained large terraced houses aimed mainly at upper middle class families. A number of the original houses survive, especially on the southern and western sides. Those to the west are occupied by the University of London, and there is a blue plaque on one at the north west corner commemorating that T. S. Eliot worked there for many years when he was poetry editor of Faber & Faber: a building now used by the School of Oriental and African Studies (a college of the University of London). Thomas Lawrence had a studio at number 67 (1805–1830). On the eastern side the Hotel Russell, built in 1898 to a design by Charles Fitzroy Doll, dominates (its builders were connected with the company which created RMS Titanic). Other past residents include the famous 19th Century architectural partnership of father and son, Philip and Philip Charles Hardwick who lived at number 60. Since 2004, the two buildings on the southern side, at numbers 46 and 47, are occupied by the Huron University USA in London. The Huron University has now been bought by Hult International Business School and has therefore changed its name. It has also allowed the old Huron to become a bigger school with many different campuses in Boston, Dubai, San Francisco.

In 1998, the London Mathematical Society moved from rooms in Burlington House to De Morgan House, at 57–58 Russell Square, in order to accommodate staff expansion. A near neighbour, at 52-53 Russell Square, is the Chartered Institute of Public Relations, which moved to the address in 2009.

'London Social Centre',[1] a squatting action by anarchists in Russell Square.
Russell square fountain 2009-11-26 1334.ogv
The fountain installed in the 2002 re-landscaping, on 26 November 2009. (8 seconds)

In 2002, the square was re-landscaped in a style based on the original early 19th-century layout by Humphry Repton (1752–1818), and the café in the square was redeveloped. The centrepiece of the new design is a fountain with jets playing directly from the pavement, which have become popular with children in the summer. Managed by London Borough of Camden the freehold of the square remains with the Bedford Estate.

[edit] Cabman's shelter

Russell Square cabmen's shelter

The Cabmen's Shelter Fund was established in London in 1875 to run shelters for the drivers of hansom cabs and later hackney carriages (taxicabs).[2]

The Russell Square shelter is one of the thirteen shelters that still exist. All are now Grade II listed buildings.

[edit] 7 July 2005 bombings

One of the bombings of 7 July 2005 was on a London Underground train from King's Cross St Pancras tube station to Russell Square tube station, and another was on a bus on Tavistock Square, near Russell Square. To commemorate the victims, many flowers were laid down at a spot on Russell Square just south of the cafe. The location is now marked with a small memorial plaque and a young oak.

[edit] Literature and culture

In the early chapters of Thackeray's Vanity Fair (1848), set circa 1812, Russell Square is evoked as the residence of the "John Sedley, Esquire, of Russell Square, and the Stock Exchange."[3]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "The Square Occupied Social Centre"
  2. ^ "Cabman's shelters, London - Victorian survivors on London's streets", Urban75, April 2006
  3. ^ William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair, Ch. 4.


Coordinates: 51°31′18″N 0°7′34″W / 51.52167°N 0.12611°W / 51.52167; -0.12611

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