NO. 10 DOWNING STREET LONDON
SUMMARY The
real history of Downing Street in London was not always surrounded by the
elegant and high society area as it is now.
The history includes a previous
prime minister Spencer Perceval being assassinated. Robert Peel's secretary was
shot dead because they mistook him for the PM.
To begin with Downing Street was
in a very doubtful neighbourhood which was full of shabby brothels, gin
parlours and violent criminals. In the nearby Jermyn Street were flagellation
clubs. In St James's Street high society Ladies could buy early varieties of
sex toys imported from Italy.
To
begin with the area where Downing Street is now was just a piece of land leased
to George Downing by the Crown at the end of 17th century. He was quite a bit
of a 'personality'. George Downing was a British Diplomat from Dublin who had
formerly been Oliver Cromwell's intelligence chief and a spy master. When
Oliver Cromwell's government fell George Downing happened to make friend with
Charles II and his son James I. That really is a diplomat.
GEORGE DOWNING |
George
Downing was shrewd and calculating. Surprise, surprise he had a reputation for
double dealings. The famous diarist Samuel Pepe called him a 'perfidious rogue'
and an 'ungrateful villain' for having been a turncoat. He not only switch
sides from the Roundheads to save his own skin but he sold his former friends.
Downing
told King Charles II, when he returned to the throne, that he realized he was
all wrong. He blamed his former republicanism on being educated at Harvard
University in America. He was one who first graduated in 1642. Although Downing
was one of the leading men overthrowing the monarchy and was part of the
execution of Charles I.
He
accumulated a great private fortune first from the republican and then from his
royal master. Although the King wasn't all that keen on him but he used him to
get back onto the path and to the monarchy.
In
1654 George Downing managed to get hold of a piece of valuable land right next
to ST James's Park. He got it more as a grace-and-favour than paying the full
price. He built a street of red brick houses there called Downing Street.
Shrewd
as he was; he saw the potential of being close to House of Parliament and this
would make future prime ministers and chancellors wanting to live close by. His
calculation was dead right but it took him 30 years to build on the land. The
lease of the land belonged to a powerful family Knyvet and they owned an old mansion
next to where 10 Downing Street is today.
Eventually
when George Downing was able to build his house he died soon after, in 1684.
The Countess of Yarmouth lived there in No 10 from 1688 to 1689. Lord Lansdowne
live there from 1692 to 1692 and Earl of Grantham from 1699 to 1703
THE FOREIGN AND
COMMONWEALTH OFFICE ON THE LEFT --- THE RED BRICK HOUSE AT THE BACK ON THE
RIGHT IS NO. 12 --- THE TWO BLACK-DOORED HOUSES ON THE LEFT ARE NO. 10
AND 12
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In
1721 the first Prime Minister Sir Robert Walpole moved in there. As a matter of
fact, he was only the "first Lord of the Treasury" but official he
was the first Prime Minister.
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The
next two prime ministers lived in their own home. When Lord North became Prime Minister
he declared No 10 Downing Street as the official home. He made improvement to
house such as putting the lion's head on the door and the famous checkerboard
floor in the hall.
Today
Downing Street is a great rambling house. It was joined up with the house
behind it and several rooms added. It has a small dining room, a large state
dining room for 65, a kitchen with a 20th high window, a garden room, a state
drawing room, a white-drawing room which was Lady Walpole's sitting room, A
Cabinet room which was Sir Robert Walpole study and a wonderful staircase.
The
house started to be neglected because the Duke of Wellington, Lord Melbourne
and Viscount Palmerstone lived in their own home.
In
1870 Disreali renovated the house in a grand Victorian manner.
Gladstone
modernised it and put in electricity, telephone and broke through to No 11 and
12.
Neville Chamberlain put central heating in 1937.
However,
many prime ministers would not have thanked Downing because it was not always a
comfortable house.
Amazing, really amazing, morality, shrewdness and greed have not changed according to the History of Downing Street and George Downing ever since.
Amazing, really amazing, morality, shrewdness and greed have not changed according to the History of Downing Street and George Downing ever since.
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