Mansion House - Mansion House Street, London, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Master Mariner
N 51° 30.794 W 000° 05.358
30U E 701961 N 5710917
Mansion House was built between 1739 and 1753 to designs by George Dance the elder.
Waymark Code: WMKGTV
Location: London, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 04/13/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Marine Biologist
Views: 6

The City of London website tells us:

Until the mid-18th century, Lord Mayors used their own houses or livery (Guild) halls for their work as head of the City's governmental, judicial and civic functions.

The idea of creating a permanent residence arose after the Great Fire of 1666 to provide a house for Lord Mayors who did not have their own livery hall. But it was almost three quarters of a century later that the architect and Clerk of the City's Work, George Dance the Elder, was chosen to design and build the Mansion House. The first stone was laid in 1739 but it was not until 1752 that Lord Mayor Sir Crispin Gascoigne was able to take up residence there. Work was completed in 1758.

The Mansion House is literally at the heart of the City, above Bank tube station and on the site of a livestock market over the River Walbrook sharing a five-way junction with Royal Exchange, the Bank of England and Hawksmoor's St Mary Woolnoth. With the exception of Queen Victoria Street, all the streets nearby (Cheapside, Cornhill, Poultry) are Roman.

Imposingly Palladian in style, it is faced by a grand temple portico at the front approached by flights of steps each side. The entertaining rooms were built on the first and second floors. The first floor had a roofless courtyard (later covered to form the Salon, the entertainment space) and the great Egyptian Hall. The second  floor has a ballroom and private apartments of the Lord Mayor and family. The third and fourth floors contain meeting rooms and staff rooms. The cellars have storage space and once held prisoners' cells, reflecting the former use of the Mansion House as the Lord Mayor's Court.

While the Mansion House retains much of its original character, there have been changes. Some fifty years later, two large roof pavilions were found to be unsafe. Dance's son, George Dance the Younger, removed one in 1795. The other was removed in 1846, and at the same time, the main entrance to the house was moved round the side, after various road works narrowed the esplanade up the steps at the front. There were refurbishments in the 1860s, and 1930s, and in 1991-3.

Today the Mansion House is home to a magnificent plate collection and an art collection including sculptures and the 84 Dutch paintings of the Harold Samuel Art Collection.

The building is Grade I listed with the entry at the English Heritage website tellings us:

1739 to 53, by Dance the Elder. Monumental, classical building with rusticated ground storey and order of Corinthian columns and pilasters through 2 main storeys plus attic above entablature. Altered roof storey behind crowning balustrade/parapet. Narrow north front has 8-columned portico with richly carved tympanum to pediment. Balustraded steps at either side (altered in C19). Long returns to east and west relatively plain but for pilastered end pavilions with large, round-arched windows above Venetian openings. Small Doric portico to west at ground floor level, now main entrance. South elevation entirely plain of yellow brick above ground storey. Numerous iron escape staircases. Ground floor windows have decorative C19 iron grilles. Interior has been altered, especially roofing of courtyard, but retains much of its exceptionally rich original decoration. 2 staircases, 2 largest rooms are ballroom to north, and Egyptian hall to south rising through whole height of building. Much C19 sculpture.

There is a memorial to the Sir Robert Taylor, the sculptor for Mansion House, in Westminster Abbey and the Westminster Abbey website tells us:

On the wall of the south transept of Westminster Abbey is a memorial to eminent architect Sir Robert Taylor. It is of white and coloured marble enriched with festoons of flowers, with a shield of arms beneath, ornamented with sprays of oak. The inscription reads:

"Sacred to the memory of Sir ROBERT TAYLOR, Knt. whose works entitle him to a distinguish'd rank in the first class of British Architects. He was eminently useful to the public as an active and impartial magistrate. He rendered himself deservedly dear to his family and friends by the uniform exercise of every social and domestic virtue. He died on the 26th day of September 1788 aged 70 years"

The arms show "sable, a lion passant argent, langued gules, an annulet for difference or". He was the son of Robert Taylor (died 1742), master of the London Masons Company, and born in 1714. He worked as a pupil to sculptor Sir Henry Cheere and his first major work was the pediment of the Mansion House in London. His monuments in the Abbey are to Captain Cornewall and General Guest. By now he was wealthy and designed interiors for rich patrons, competing with fellow architects Robert Adam and William Chambers. He also designed many public buildings, notably the Bank of England. After service as a magistrate and as sheriff of London he was knighted. He is buried in St Martin in the Fields in London. His only son Michael Angelo Taylor (1757-1834) was educated at Westminster School and became a politician and married Frances Vane.

Wikipedia Url: [Web Link]

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