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Middleton Place

London W1, built in 1759

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 * About this website
 * Maps of the area (since 1746)
 * Censuses (1841 to 1911)
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ABOUT

This website provides some history of Middleton Place, known as Middleton
Buildings until it was renamed in 1989, and some useful local information.

[  Resident's news can be found -> here <-  ]

Built in London in 1759, Middleton Place is the oldest surviving pedestrian
walkway north of Oxford Street. It is also the only remaining solely residential
walkway in the West End.

The original ‘Middleton’s Buildings’ are made up of the ten houses you see
today: numbered 1-5 and 7-11.  The area occupied by 6 Middleton Place has been
rebuilt and remodelled several times since 1759 and, as a result, there are
currently two separate properties sharing the 6 Middleton Place address: one on
the west side of the Place, the other on the east side.

‘Formerly’ or ‘Formally’ – you decide…



These signs face each other at the north end of Middleton Place, at it’s
junction with Langham Street. The newer ‘formally’ sign appeared after the
refurbishment of the Yorkshire Grey pub in 2015.

 

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