St James's Place is a street in the St James's district of London near Green Park.[1] It was first developed around 1694, the historian John Strype describing it in 1720 as a "good Street ... which receiveth a fresh Air out of the Park; the Houses are well-built, and inhabited by Gentry ..."[2][3]Henry Benjamin Wheatley wrote in 1870 that it was "one of the oddest built streets in London."[3]
^Stow, John. "Southwark, and Parts Adjacent", A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster, Borough of Southwark and Parts Adjacent, p. 663.
Also see "St James's Park," The Parish of St. James Westminster. Part II: north of Piccadilly, Volumes 31–32 of Survey volumes, Athlone Press, University of London, 1963, p. 511ff.
^ abCite error: The named reference RaP was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Ed Glinert (2004), "St. James's Place", The London Compendium, Penguin UK, ISBN9780141012131