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10 Downing Street

10 Downing Street in London, also known colloquially in the United Kingdom as Number 10, is the official residence and executive office of the first lord of the treasury, usually, by convention, the prime minister of the United Kingdom.[2] Along with the adjoining Cabinet Office at 70 Whitehall, it is the headquarters of the Government of the United Kingdom.

10 Downing Street
Location in Westminster
General information
Architectural styleGeorgian
Town or cityCity of Westminster
London, SW1
CountryUnited Kingdom
Coordinates51°30′12″N 0°07′39″W / 51.5033°N 0.1275°W / 51.5033; -0.1275Coordinates: 51°30′12″N 0°07′39″W / 51.5033°N 0.1275°W / 51.5033; -0.1275
Current tenantsRishi Sunak (Prime Minister of the United Kingdom)
Larry (Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office)
Listed Building – Grade I
Official name10 Downing Street, SW1A 2AA
Designated14 January 1970
Reference no.1210759[1]
Construction started1682; 341 years ago (1682)
Completed1684; 339 years ago (1684)
Design and construction
Architect(s)Kenton Couse

Situated in Downing Street in the City of Westminster, London, Number 10 is over 300 years old and contains approximately 100 rooms. A private residence for the prime minister's use occupies the third floor and there is a kitchen in the basement. The other floors contain offices and conference, reception, sitting and dining rooms where the prime minister works, and where government ministers, national leaders and foreign dignitaries are met and hosted. At the rear is an interior courtyard and a terrace overlooking a 12 acre (0.2 ha) garden. Adjacent to St James's Park, Number 10 is approximately 34 mile (1.2 km) from Buckingham Palace, the London residence of the British Monarch, and near the Palace of Westminster, the meeting place of both Houses of Parliament.

Originally three houses, Number 10 was offered to Robert Walpole by King George II in 1732.[3] Walpole accepted on the condition that the gift was to the office of First Lord of the Treasury. The post of First Lord of the Treasury has, for much of the 18th and 19th centuries and invariably since 1905, been held by the prime minister. Walpole commissioned William Kent to join the three houses and it is this larger house that is known as Number 10 Downing Street.

Despite its size and convenient location near to Parliament, few early prime ministers lived at 10 Downing Street. Costly to maintain, neglected, and run-down, Number 10 was scheduled to be demolished several times, but the property survived and became linked with many statesmen and events in British history. In 1985, Margaret Thatcher said Number 10 had become "one of the most precious jewels in the national heritage".[4]

10 Downing Street is Government property. Its registered legal title is held in the name of the secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities (the secretary of state is a corporation sole).[5]

History of the building

Original Number 10

Number 10 Downing Street was originally three properties: a mansion overlooking St James's Park called "the House at the Back", a town house behind it and a cottage. The town house, from which the modern building gets its name, was one of several built by George Downing between 1682 and 1684.

Downing, a notorious spy for Oliver Cromwell and later Charles II, invested in property and acquired considerable wealth.[6][7][8] In 1654, he purchased the lease on land south of St James's Park, adjacent to the House at the Back within walking distance of parliament. Downing planned to build a row of terraced town houses "for persons of good quality to inhabit in ..."[9] The street on which he built them now bears his name, and the largest became part of Number 10 Downing Street.

 
Portrait of George Downing painted c. 1675–1690 by Thomas Smith, The Fogg Museum

Straightforward as the investment seemed, it proved otherwise. The Hampden family had a lease on the land that they refused to relinquish. Downing fought their claim, but failed and had to wait 30 years before he could build.[10] When the Hampden lease expired, Downing received permission to build on land further west to take advantage of more recent property developments. The new warrant issued in 1682 reads: "Sir George Downing ... [is authorised] to build new and more houses ... subject to the proviso that it be not built any nearer than 14 feet of the wall of the said Park at the West end thereof".[9] Between 1682 and 1684, Downing built a cul-de-sac of two-storey town houses with coach-houses, stables and views of St James's Park. Over the years, the addresses changed several times. In 1787 Number 5 became "Number 10".[11]

Downing employed Christopher Wren to design the houses. Although large, they were put up quickly and cheaply on soft soil with shallow foundations. Winston Churchill wrote that Number 10 was "shaky and lightly built by the profiteering contractor whose name they bear".[12]

The upper end of the Downing Street cul-de-sac closed off the access to St James's Park, making the street quiet and private. An advertisement in 1720 described it as "a pretty open Place, especially at the upper end, where are four or five very large and well-built Houses, fit for Persons of Honour and Quality; each House having a pleasant Prospect into St James's Park, with a Tarras Walk".[13] The cul-de-sac had several distinguished residents: George Granville, 1st Baron Lansdowne from 1692 to 1696 and the Earl of Grantham from 1699 to 1703.[13]

Downing did not live in Downing Street.[14][15] In 1675 he retired to Cambridge, where he died in 1684, a few months after building was completed. In 1800 the wealth he had accumulated was used to found Downing College, Cambridge, as had been his wish should his descendants fail in the male line. Downing's portrait hangs in the entrance hall of Number 10.[16]

History of the "House at the Back" before 1733

 
The Palace of Whitehall by Hendrick Danckerts c. 1660–1679. Viewed from St James's Park, the "House at the Back" is on the right; the octagonal building next to it is the Cockpit.

The "House at the Back", the largest of the three houses which were combined to make Number 10, was a mansion built in about 1530 next to Whitehall Palace. Rebuilt, expanded, and renovated many times since, it was originally one of several buildings that made up the "Cockpit Lodgings", so-called because they were attached to an octagonal structure used for cock-fighting. Early in the 17th century, the Cockpit was converted to a concert hall and theatre; after the Glorious Revolution of 1688, some of the first cabinet meetings were held there secretly.[17]

For many years, the "House at the Back" was the home of Thomas Knevett, Keeper of Whitehall Palace, famous for capturing Guy Fawkes in 1605 and foiling his plot to assassinate King James I. The previous year, Knevett had moved into a house next door, approximately where Number 10 is today.[18][19]

From that time, the "House at the Back" was usually occupied by members of the royal family or the government. Princess Elizabeth, eldest daughter of King James I, lived there from 1604 until 1613 when she married Frederick V, Elector Palatine and moved to Heidelberg. She was the grandmother of King George I, the Elector of Hanover, who became King of Great Britain in 1714, and was the great-grandmother of King George II, who presented the house to Walpole in 1732.[20]

George Monck, 1st Duke of Albemarle, the general responsible for the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660, lived there from 1660 until his death in 1671. As head of the Great Treasury Commission of 1667–1672, Albemarle transformed accounting methods and allowed the Crown greater control over expenses. His secretary, George Downing, who built Downing Street, is thought to have created these changes. Albemarle is the first treasury minister to have lived in what became the home of the First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister.[21]

In 1671 George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham took possession when he joined the Cabal Ministry. At considerable expense, Buckingham rebuilt the house. The result was a spacious mansion, lying parallel to Whitehall Palace with a view of St James Park from its garden.[22]

After Buckingham retired in 1676, Lady Charlotte Fitzroy, Charles II's daughter, moved in when she married Edward Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield. The Crown authorised extensive rebuilding which included adding a storey, thus giving it three main floors, an attic and basement. This structure can be seen today as the rear section of Number 10.[23] (See Plan of the Premises Granted to the Earl and Countess of Lichfield in 1677)[24][25] The likely reason that repair was required is that the house had settled in the swampy ground near the Thames, causing structural damage.[26] Like Downing Street, it rested on a shallow foundation, a design error that caused problems until 1960 when the modern Number 10 was rebuilt on deep pilings.[27]

The Lichfields followed James II into exile after the Glorious Revolution. Two years later in 1690, William III and Mary II gave the "House at the Back" to Hendrik van Nassau-Ouwerkerk, a Dutch general who had assisted in securing the Crown for the Prince of Orange. Nassau, who Anglicised his name to "Overkirk", lived there until his death in 1708.[23]

The "House at the Back" reverted to the Crown when Lady Overkirk died in 1720. The Treasury issued an order "for repairing and fitting it up in the best and most substantial manner" at a cost of £2,522. The work included: "The Back passage into Downing street to be repaired and a new door; a New Necessary House to be made; To take down the Useless passage formerly made for the Maids of Honour to go into Downing Street, when the Queen lived at the Cockpit; To New Cast a great Lead Cistern & pipes and to lay the Water into the house & a new frame for ye Cistern".[28] (See Buildings on the Site of the Cockpit and Number 10 Downing Street c1720)[25][29]

The name of the "House at the Back" changed with the occupant, from Lichfield House to Overkirk House in 1690 to Bothmer House in 1720.[30]

First politician and "head of government" in the house

Johann Caspar von Bothmer, Premier Minister of the Electorate of Hanover, head of the German Chancery and adviser to George I and II, took up residency in 1720. Although Bothmer complained about "the ruinous Condition of the Premises",[31] he lived there until his death in 1732. Even though Count von Bothmer was not British, he was a subject of George I and George II and the first politician and head of a government who resided in 10 Downing Street.[32]

First Lord's house: 1733–1735

 
Robert Walpole accepted George II's gift of the house at the back and two Downing Street houses on behalf of the office of the First Lord of the Treasury.

When Count Bothmer died, ownership of the "House at the Back" reverted to the Crown. George II took this opportunity to offer it to Robert Walpole, often called the first prime minister, as a gift for his services to the nation: stabilising its finances, keeping it at peace and securing the Hanoverian succession. Coincidentally, the King had obtained the leases on two Downing Street properties, including Number 10, and added these to his proposed gift.

Walpole did not accept the gift for himself.[33] He proposed—and the King agreed—that the Crown give the properties to the Office of First Lord of the Treasury. Walpole would live there as the incumbent First Lord, but would vacate it for the next one.[34]

To enlarge the new house, Walpole persuaded Mr Chicken, the tenant of a cottage next door, to move to another house in Downing Street.[35] This small house and the mansion at the back were then incorporated into Number 10. Walpole commissioned William Kent to convert them into one building. Kent joined the larger houses by building a two-storey structure between them, consisting of one long room on the ground floor and several above. The remaining interior space was converted into a courtyard. He connected the Downing Street houses with a corridor.

Having united the structures, Kent gutted and rebuilt the interior. He then surmounted the third storey of the house at the back with a pediment. To allow Walpole quicker access to Parliament, Kent closed the north side entrance from St James's Park, and made the door in Downing Street the main entrance.

The rebuilding took three years. On 23 September 1735, the London Daily Post announced that: "Yesterday the Right Hon. Sir Robert Walpole, with his Lady and Family, removed from their House in St James's Square, to his new House, adjoining to the Treasury in St James's Park".[36] The cost of conversion is unknown. Originally estimated at £8,000, the final cost probably exceeded £20,000.[37]

Walpole did not enter through the now-famous door; that would not be installed until forty years later. Kent's door was modest, belying the spacious elegance beyond. The First Lord's new, albeit temporary, home had sixty rooms, with hardwood and marble floors, crown moulding, elegant pillars and marble mantelpieces; those on the west side with views of St James's Park. One of the largest rooms was a study measuring forty feet by twenty with enormous windows overlooking St James's Park. "My Lord's Study"[38] (as Kent labelled it in his drawings) would later become the Cabinet Room where Prime Ministers meet with the Cabinet ministers.[39]

Shortly after moving in, Walpole ordered that a portion of the land outside his study be converted into a terrace and garden. Letters patent issued in April 1736 state that: "... a piece of garden ground situated in his Majesty's park of St James's, & belonging & adjoining to the house now inhabited by the Right Honourable the Chancellor of His Majesty's Exchequer, hath been lately made & fitted up at the Charge ... of the Crown".

The same document confirmed that Number 10 Downing Street was: "meant to be annexed & united to the Office of his Majesty's Treasury & to be & to remain for the Use & Habitation of the first Commissioner of his Majesty's Treasury for the time being".[40]

10 Downing Street and Kent's Treasury Building

At about the same time that William Kent was combining the Downing Street townhouse with the house at the back, he was also commissioned to design and construct a new Treasury building on the site of the old Tudor Cockpit located behind Downing Street. This project was completed in 1737 and included corridors connecting the Treasury building with Ten Downing Street allowing Walpole, as Chancellor of the Exchequer as well as First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister, direct and convenient access to the Treasury offices. In effect the Treasury building became an annex of Ten Downing Street and its staff worked directly for Walpole on treasury, patronage and other public business. This arrangement remained in effect until the middle of the 19th century and until then all Prime Ministers who were also Chancellor took advantage of it. After Prime Minister Robert Peel "gave up" being Chancellor in 1841, and this separation of positions gradually became a convention of the constitution, a locked door was installed between the buildings limiting the Prime Minister's access to the Treasury and its staff. Due to bomb damage in 1940, the Treasury relocated to the Government Offices Great George Street. Then in 1963 the Cabinet Office (including the Prime Minister's Office) and later the Civil Service (with the Prime minister as Minister for the Civil Service) moved into the renovated Kent Treasury Building. "Under (Prime Minister) Blair . . . the locked door, symbolically and physically dividing No. 10 from the Cabinet Office, was passed through with such frequency that its meaning was lost."[41]

A "vast, awkward house": 1735–1902

 
William Pitt the Younger lived in Number 10 for twenty years, longer than any Prime Minister before or since.

Walpole lived in Number 10 until 1742. Although he had accepted it on behalf of future First Lords of the Treasury, it would be 21 years before any of his successors chose to live there; the five who followed Walpole preferred their own homes. This was the pattern until the beginning of the 20th century. Of the 31 First Lords from 1735 to 1902, only 16 (including Walpole) lived in Number 10.[42]

One reason many First Lords chose not to live in Number 10 was that most owned London town houses superior in size and quality. To them, Number 10 was unimpressive. Their possession of the house, albeit temporary, was a perquisite they could bestow as a political reward. Most lent it to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, others to lesser officials or to friends and relatives.[43][44][45][46][47][note 1]

Another reason for its unpopularity was that Number 10 was a hazardous place in which to live. Prone to sinking because it was built on soft soil and a shallow foundation, floors buckled and walls and chimneys cracked. It became unsafe and frequently required repairs. In 1766, for example, Charles Townshend, Chancellor of the Exchequer, pointed out that the house was in a dilapidated condition. His architect's letter to the Treasury stated: "...we have caused the House in Downing Street belonging to the Treasury to be surveyed, & find the Walls of the old part of the said House next the street to be much decayed, the Floors & Chimneys much sunk from the level".[49] Townshend ordered extensive repairs, which were still incomplete eight years later. A note from Lord North to the Office of Works, dated September 1774, asks that the work on the front of the house, "which was begun by a Warrant from the Treasury dated 9 August 1766",[50] should be finished. (See Kent's Treasury and No. 10, Downing Street, circa 1754.)[25][51]

Treasury officials complained that the building was costing too much to maintain; some suggested that it should be razed and a new house constructed on the site or elsewhere. In 1782 the Board of Works reporting on "the dangerous state of the old part of the House", stated that "no time be lost in taking down said building".[52] In 1783 the Duke of Portland moved out because it was once again in need of repair. A committee found that the money spent so far was insufficient. This time the Board of Works declared that "the Repairs, Alterations & Additions at the Chancellor of the Exchequer's House will amount to the sum of £5,580, exclusive of the sum for which they already have His Majesty's Warrant. And praying a Warrant for the said sum of £5,580—and also praying an Imprest of that sum to enable them to pay the Workmen".[52] This proved to be a gross underestimate; the final bill was over £11,000. The Morning Herald fumed about the expense: "£500 pounds p.a. preceding the Great Repair, and £11,000 the Great Repair itself! So much has this extraordinary edifice cost the country – For one moiety of the sum a much better dwelling might have been purchased!"[53] (See Plan of the Design for Number 10 c1781.)[54][55]

A few prime ministers however did enjoy living in Number 10. Lord North, who conducted the war against the American Revolution, lived there happily with his family from 1767 to 1782. William Pitt the Younger, who made it his home for twenty years (longer than any First Lord before or since) from 1783 to 1801 and from 1804 to 1806, referred to it as "My vast, awkward house".[50] While there, Pitt reduced the national debt, formed the Triple Alliance against France and won passage of the Act of Union that created the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Fredrick Robinson, Lord Goderich took a special liking to the house in the late 1820s and spent state funds lavishly remodelling the interior.[56]

Nevertheless, for 70 years following Pitt's death in 1806, Number 10 was rarely used as the First Lord's residence. From 1834 to 1877, it was either vacant or used only for offices and meetings.[42]

Downing Street declined at the turn of the 19th century, becoming surrounded with run-down buildings, dark alleys, the scene of crime and prostitution. Earlier, the government had taken over the other Downing Street houses: the Colonial Office occupied Number 14 in 1798; the Foreign Office was at Number 16 and the houses on either side; the West India Department was in Number 18; and the Tithe Commissioners in Number 20. The houses deteriorated from neglect, became unsafe, and one by one were demolished. By 1857 Downing Street's townhouses were all gone except for Number 10, Number 11 (customarily the Chancellor of the Exchequer's residence), and Number 12 (used as offices for Government Whips). In 1879 a fire destroyed the upper floors of Number 12; it was renovated but only as a single-storey structure.[57][58] (See Numbers 10, 11, and 12 Downing Street First Floor Plan[59] and Ground Floor Plan.)[60]

Revival and recognition: 1902–1960

 
Winston Churchill emerging from Number 10 in 1943

When Lord Salisbury retired in 1902, his nephew, Arthur James Balfour, became Prime Minister. It was an easy transition: he was already First Lord of the Treasury and he was already living in Number 10. Balfour revived the custom that Number 10 is the First Lord and Prime Minister's official residence. It has remained the custom since.

However, there have been numerous times when prime ministers have unofficially lived elsewhere out of necessity or preference. Winston Churchill, for example, had a great affection for Number 10, but, during World War II, he grudgingly slept in the hastily converted flat on the ground floor of what was then the New Public Office building (NPO) at nearby Storey's Gate.[61][page needed] The flat became known as the No.10 Annexe, and lay above the much more comprehensive underground bunker now known as the Cabinet War Rooms, and where he also had a bedroom, very rarely used.[62] To reassure the people that his government was functioning normally, he insisted on being seen entering and leaving Number 10 occasionally, and indeed, continued to use it for meetings and dinners despite being urged not to.[63] Harold Wilson, during his second ministry from 1974 to 1976, lived in his home in Lord North Street because Mary Wilson wanted "a proper home".[64] However, recognizing the symbolic importance of Number 10, he worked and held meetings there and entertained guests in the State Dining Room.

For most of his premiership, Tony Blair lived in the more spacious residence above Number 11 to accommodate his relatively large family (a wife and four children). In May 2010, it was reported that David Cameron, who also had four small children upon taking office, would also take up actual residence above Number 11, and his Chancellor, George Osborne, above Number 10.[65]

 
The damaged drawing room of 10 Downing Street following a bomb raid in February 1944.

Despite these exceptions, Number 10 has been known as the prime minister's official home for over one hundred years. By the turn of the 20th century, photography and the penny press had linked Number 10 in the public mind with the premiership. The introduction of films and television would strengthen this association. Pictures of prime ministers with distinguished guests at the door became commonplace. With or without the prime minister present, visitors had their picture taken. Suffragettes posed in front of the door when they petitioned H. H. Asquith for women's rights in 1913, a picture that became famous and was circulated around the world. In 1931, Mohandas Gandhi, wearing the traditional homespun dhoti, posed leaving Number 10 after meeting with Ramsay MacDonald to discuss India's independence.[66] This picture, too, became famous especially in India. The freedom fighters could see their leader had been received in the prime minister's home. Couse's elegant, understated door—stark black, framed in cream white with a bold white "10" clearly visible—was the perfect backdrop to record such events. Prime Ministers made historic announcements from the front step. Waving the Anglo-German Agreement of Friendship, Neville Chamberlain proclaimed "Peace with honour" in 1938 from Number 10 after his meeting with Adolf Hitler in Munich.[67] During World War II, Churchill was photographed many times emerging confidently from Number 10 holding up two fingers in the sign for "Victory". The building itself, however, did not escape the London Blitz entirely unscathed; in February 1944 a bomb fell on nearby Horse Guards Parade and some of the drawing-room windows were destroyed.

The symbol of British government, Number 10 became a gathering place for protesters. Emmeline Pankhurst and other suffragette leaders stormed Downing Street in 1908;[68] anti-Vietnam War protestors marched there in the 1960s, as did anti-Iraq and Afghanistan War protestors in the 2000s.

Rebuilding: 1960–1990

 
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and U.S. President Ronald Reagan at 10 Downing Street in 1982.

By the middle of the 20th century, Number 10 was falling apart again. The deterioration had been obvious for some time. The number of people allowed in the upper floors was limited for fear the bearing walls would collapse. The staircase had sunk several inches; some steps were buckled and the balustrade was out of alignment. Dry rot was widespread throughout. The interior wood in the Cabinet Room's double columns was like sawdust. Skirting boards, doors, sills and other woodwork were riddled and weakened with disease. After reconstruction had begun, miners dug down into the foundations and found that the huge wooden beams supporting the house had decayed.[69][70]

In 1958, a committee under the chairmanship of the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres was appointed by Harold Macmillan to investigate the condition of the house and make recommendations. In the committee's report there was some discussion of tearing down the building and constructing an entirely new residence but because the prime minister's home had become an icon of British architecture like Windsor Castle, Buckingham Palace and the Houses of Parliament, the committee recommended that Number 10 (and Numbers 11 and 12) should be rebuilt using as much of the original materials as possible.[69] The interior would be photographed, measured, disassembled, and restored. A new foundation with deep pilings would be laid and the original buildings reassembled on top of it, allowing for much needed expansion and modernisation. Any original materials that were beyond repair – such as the pair of double columns in the Cabinet Room – would be replicated in detail. This was a formidable undertaking: the three buildings contained over 200 rooms spread out over five floors.[71]

The architect Raymond Erith carried out the design for this painstaking work[72] and the contractor that undertook it was John Mowlem & Co.[73]The Times reported initially that the cost for the project would be £400,000. After more careful studies were completed, it was concluded that the "total cost was likely to be £1,250,000" and would take two years to complete.[74] In the end, the cost was close to £3,000,000 and took almost three years due in large part to 14 labour strikes. There were also delays when archaeological excavations uncovered important artefacts dating from Roman, Saxon and medieval times.[71][75] Macmillan lived in Admiralty House during the reconstruction.

 
The replica of the door with the Union Flag decoration in 2015

The new foundation was made of steel-reinforced concrete with pilings sunk 6 to 18 feet (1.8 to 5.5 m).[76] The "new" Number 10 consisted of about 60% new materials; the remaining 40% was either restored or replicas of originals. Many rooms and sections of the new building were reconstructed exactly as they were in the old Number 10. These included: the garden floor, the door and entrance foyer, the stairway, the hallway to the Cabinet Room, the Cabinet Room, the garden and terrace, the Small and Large State Rooms and the three reception rooms. The staircase, however, was rebuilt and simplified. Steel was hidden inside the columns in the Pillared Drawing Room to support the floor above. The upper floors were modernised and the third floor extended over Numbers 11 and 12 to allow more living space. As many as 40 coats of paint were stripped from the elaborate cornices in the main rooms revealing details unseen for almost 200 years in some cases.[76]

When builders examined the exterior façade, they discovered that the black colour visible even in photographs from the mid-19th century was misleading; the bricks were actually yellow. The black appearance was the product of two centuries of pollution. To preserve the 'traditional' look of recent times, the newly cleaned yellow bricks were painted black to resemble their well-known appearance.[77][78] The thin tuckpointing mortar between the bricks is not painted, and so contrasts with the bricks.

Although the reconstruction was generally considered an architectural triumph, Erith was disappointed. He complained openly during and after the project that the government had altered his design to save money. "I am heart broken by the result," he said. "The whole project has been a frightful waste of money because it just has not been done properly. The Ministry of Works has insisted on economy after economy. I am bitterly disappointed with what has happened."[79] Erith described the numbers on the front, intended to be based on historical models, as 'a mess' and 'completely wrong' to a fellow historian.[80]

Erith's concerns proved justified. Within a few years, dry rot was discovered, especially in the main rooms due to inadequate waterproofing and a broken water pipe. Extensive reconstruction again had to be undertaken in the late 1960s to resolve these problems.[81] Further extensive repairs and remodelling, commissioned by Margaret Thatcher, were completed in the 1980s under the direction of Erith's associate, Quinlan Terry.[82]

1990–present

 
Christmas tree outside Number 10 in 2021

The work done by Erith and Terry in the 1960s and 1980s represent the most extensive remodelling of Number 10 in recent times. Since 1990 when the Terry reconstruction was completed, repairing, redecorating, remodelling, and updating the house has been ongoing as needed. The IRA mortar attack in February 1991 led to extensive work being done to repair the damage (mostly to the garden and exterior walls) and to improve security. In the summer of 1993 windows were rebuilt and in 1995 computer cables installed. In 1997, the building was remodelled to provide extra space for the prime minister's greatly increased staff.[83]

To accommodate their large families, both Tony Blair and David Cameron chose to live in the private residence above Number 11 rather than the smaller one above Number 10. In 2010, the Camerons completely modernised the 50-year-old private kitchen in Number 11. In March 2020, Prime Minister Boris Johnson refurbished the residential apartment at Number 11. This became the subject of public controversy, and an Electoral Commission inquiry took place into the financing of the refurbishment.[84]

10 Downing Street today

The current tenant of 10 Downing Street is Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. It has been common practice in recent decades for the Prime Minister to live at Number 11, as its residential apartment is larger, and for the Chancellor to live at Number 10. However, the traditional residencies have not changed in official terms.

It presently houses the UK Cabinet Room in which Cabinet meetings in the UK take place, chaired by the current Prime Minister, Sunak. It also houses the Prime Minister's Executive Office, which deals with logistics and diplomacy concerning the government of the United Kingdom.[85]

Rooms and special features

Front door and entrance hall

 
Mahatma Gandhi outside Number 10 in 1931. Dignitaries and visitors often pose for a photograph outside the door.
 
The front door of 10 Downing Street, showing the letter-box inscribed with "First Lord of the Treasury"

Number 10's door is the product of the renovations Charles Townshend ordered in 1766; it was probably not completed until 1772. Executed in the Georgian style by the architect Kenton Couse, it is unassuming and narrow, consisting of a single white stone step leading to a modest brick front. The small, six-panelled door, originally made of black oak, is surrounded by cream-coloured casing and adorned with a semicircular fanlight window. Painted in white, between the top and middle sets of panels, is the number "10". The zero of the number "10" is painted in a very eccentric style, in a 37° angle anticlockwise. One theory is that this is in fact a capital 'O' as found in the Roman's Trajan alphabet that was used by the Ministry of Works at the time.[80][86] A black iron knocker in the shape of a lion's head is between the two middle panels; below the knocker is a brass letter box with the inscription "First Lord of the Treasury". The doorbell is inscribed with "PUSH" although is rarely used in practice. A black ironwork fence with spiked newel posts runs along the front of the house and up each side of the step to the door. The fence rises above the step into a double-swirled archway, supporting an iron gas lamp surmounted by a crown.[87] (See The Entrance Door c1930: As seen from the outside)[88][89] The door cannot be opened from the outside; there is always someone inside to unlock the door.[90][91][92]

After the IRA mortar attack in 1991, the original black oak door was replaced by a blast-proof steel one. Regularly removed for refurbishment and replaced with a replica, it is so heavy that it takes eight men to lift it. The brass letterbox still bears the legend "First Lord of the Treasury". The original door was put on display in the Churchill Museum at the Cabinet War Rooms.

 
Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher with US First Lady Nancy Reagan in 1986 standing in the entrance hall.

Beyond the door, Couse installed black and white marble tiles in the entrance hall that are still in use. A guard's chair designed by Chippendale sits in one corner. Once used when policemen sat on watch outside in the street, it has an unusual "hood" designed to protect them from the wind and cold and a drawer underneath where hot coals were placed to provide warmth. Scratches on the right arm were caused by their pistols rubbing up against the leather.[93] Number 10 Downing Street has a lift.[94]

Couse also added a bow front to the small cottage—formerly Mr Chicken's house—incorporated into Number 10 in Walpole's time.[87] (See The Entrance Door c1930: As seen from inside showing the black and white marble floor and the door providing access to Number 11)[95][96]

Main staircase

When William Kent rebuilt the interior between 1732 and 1734, his craftsmen created a stone triple staircase. The main section had no visible supports. With a wrought iron balustrade, embellished with a scroll design, and mahogany handrail, it rises from the garden floor to the third floor. Kent's staircase is the first architectural feature visitors see as they enter Number 10. Black and white engravings and photographs of all the past prime ministers decorate the wall. They are rearranged slightly to make room for a photograph of each new Prime Minister. There is one exception. Winston Churchill is represented in two photographs.[97][98] At the bottom of the staircase are group photographs of Prime Ministers with their Cabinet ministers and representatives to imperial conferences.[97] (See The Main Stairway c1930 General view showing portraits of the prime ministers[99] and Detail of the Wrought Iron Balustrade[100])[101][102] (See also Simon Schama's Tour of Downing Street. Pt4: The Staircase[103])

Cabinet Room

Robert Lowe – ChancellorJohn Bright – Board of TradeGeorge Campbell, Duke of Argyll – IndiaGeorge Villiers, Earl of Clarendon – Foreign AffairsHenry Bruce, Baron Aberdare – Home SecretaryWilliam Wood, Baron Hatherley – Lord ChancellorGeorge Robinson, Earl de Grey and Ripon – Lord President of the CouncilGranville Leveson-Gower, Earl Granville – ColoniesJohn Wodehouse, Earl of Kimberley – Privy SealGeorge Goschen – Poor LawWilliam Ewart Gladstone – Prime MinisterSpencer Cavendish, Marquess of Hartington – Postmaster GeneralChichester Parkinson-Fortescue, Baron Carlingford – IrelandEdward Cardwell – Secretary for WarHugh Childers – First Lord of the AdmiraltyUse your cursor to explore (or click icon to enlarge) 
Prime Minister William Gladstone (in the foreground) meeting with his Cabinet in 1868[104] in the Cabinet Room, with its distinctive pair of double columns in the background.[105]

In Kent's design for the enlarged Number 10, the Cabinet Room was a simple rectangular space with enormous windows. As part of the renovations begun in 1783, it was extended, giving the space its modern appearance. Probably not completed until 1796,[106] this alteration was achieved by removing the east wall and rebuilding it several feet inside the adjoining secretaries' room. At the entrance, a screen of two pairs of Corinthian columns was erected (to carry the extra span of the ceiling) supporting a moulded entablature that wraps around the room. Robert Taylor, the architect who executed this concept, was knighted on its completion.[107] The resulting small space, framed by the pillars, serves as an anteroom to the larger area. Hendrick Danckerts' painting "The Palace of Whitehall" (shown at the beginning of this article) usually hangs in the ante-room.[108] It also contains two large bookcases that house the prime minister's library; Cabinet members traditionally donate to the collection on leaving office – a tradition that began with Ramsay MacDonald in 1931.[109][110][111][112]

 
David Cameron showing John Kerry around the Cabinet Room in 2016

Although Kent intended the First Lord to use this space as his study, it has rarely served that purpose; it has almost always been the Cabinet Room. There have been a few exceptions. Stanley Baldwin used the Cabinet Room as his office. A few prime ministers, such as Tony Blair, occasionally worked at the Cabinet Room table. Painted off-white with large floor to ceiling windows along one of the long walls, the room is light and airy. Three brass chandeliers hang from the high ceiling. The Cabinet table, purchased during the Gladstone era, dominates the room. The modern boat-shaped top, introduced by Harold Macmillan in the late 1950s, is supported by huge original oak legs. The table is surrounded by carved, solid mahogany chairs that also date from the Gladstone era. The prime minister's chair, the only one with arms, is situated midway along one side in front of the marble fireplace, facing the windows; when not in use, it is positioned at an angle for easy access.[113] The only picture in the room is a copy of a portrait of Robert Walpole by Jean-Baptiste van Loo hanging over the fireplace.[114] Each Cabinet member is allocated a chair based on order of seniority. Blotters inscribed with their titles mark their places.

The First Lord has no designated office space in Number 10; each has chosen one of the adjoining rooms as his or her private office.

State drawing rooms

Number 10 has three inter-linked state drawing rooms: the Pillared Drawing Room, the Terracotta Drawing Room and the White Drawing Room. (See the three state drawing rooms.[115])

Pillared State Drawing Room

 
Prime Minister Gordon Brown and US President Barack Obama in the Pillared Room, 2009

The largest is the Pillared Room thought to have been created in 1796 by Taylor. Measuring 37 feet (11 m) long by 28 feet (8.5 m) wide, it takes its name from the twin Ionic pilasters with straight pediments at one end. Today, there is a portrait of Queen Elizabeth I over the fireplace; during the Thatcher Ministry (1979–1990), a portrait of William Pitt by Romney was hung there.

A Persian carpet covers almost the entire floor. A copy of a 16th-century original now kept in the Victoria and Albert Museum, there is an inscription woven into it that reads: "I have no refuge in the world other than thy threshold. My head has no protection other than this porchway. The work of a slave of the holy place, Maqsud of Kashan in the year 926" (the Islamic year corresponding to 1520).[116]

In the restoration conducted in the late 1980s, Quinlan Terry restored the fireplace. Executed in the Kentian style, the small Ionic pilasters in the over-mantel are miniature duplicates of the large Ionic pillars in the room. The Ionic motif is also found in the door surrounds and panelling.[117]

Sparsely furnished with a few chairs and sofas around the walls, the Pillared Room is usually used to receive guests before they go into the State Dining Room. However, it is sometimes used for other purposes that require a large open space. International agreements have been signed in this room. Tony Blair entertained the England Rugby Union team in the Pillared Room after they won the World Cup in 2003. John Logie Baird gave Ramsay MacDonald a demonstration of his invention, the television, in this room.[118][119] (See The Pillared Drawing Room c1927).[120][96][121] After the Apollo 11 lunar landing in July 1969, Harold Wilson hosted a reception in the room for astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins, in addition to Cambridge scientist Francis Thomas Bacon, inventor of the alkaline fuel cell used to generate power for space capsules.[122]

Terracotta State Drawing Room

The Terracotta Room is the middle of the three drawing rooms. It was used as the dining room when Robert Walpole was prime minister.[38] The name changes according to the colour it is painted. When Margaret Thatcher came to power it was the Blue Room; she had it re-decorated and renamed the Green Room. It is now painted terracotta.

In the renovation of the 1980s Quinlan Terry introduced large Doric order columns to this room in the door surrounds and designed a very large Palladian overmantel for the fireplace with small double Doric columns on each side with the royal arms above. Terry also added an ornate gilded ceiling to give the rooms a more stately look. Carved into the plasterwork above the door leading to the Pillared Room is a tribute to Margaret Thatcher: a straw-carrying 'thatcher'.[123]

White State Drawing Room

The White State Drawing room was, until the 1940s, used by Prime Ministers and their partners for their private use. It was here that Edward Heath kept his grand piano. It is often used as the backdrop for television interviews and is in regular use as a meeting room for Downing Street staff. The room links through to the Terracotta Room next door. In the reconstruction during the late 1980s, Quinlan Terry used Corinthian columns and added ornate Baroque-style central ceiling mouldings and corner mouldings of the four national flowers of the United Kingdom: rose (England), thistle (Scotland), daffodil (Wales) and shamrock (Northern Ireland).[123]

State Dining Room

When Frederick Robinson (later Lord Goderich), became Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1823, he decided to leave a personal legacy to the nation. To this end, he employed John Soane, the distinguished architect who had designed the Bank of England and many other famous buildings, to build a State Dining Room for Number 10. Begun in 1825 and completed in 1826 at a cost of £2,000, the result is a spacious room with oak panelling and reeded mouldings. Accessed through the first floor, its vaulted, arched ceiling rises up through the next so that it actually occupies two floors. Measuring 42 by 26 feet (12.8 by 7.9 m), it is the largest room in Number 10. Soane was the guest of honour when the dining room was first used on 4 April 1826.

The room is usually furnished with a table surrounded by 20 reproduction Adam style chairs originally made for the British Embassy in Rio de Janeiro. For larger gatherings, a horseshoe-shaped table is brought in that will accommodate up to 65 guests. On these occasions, the table is set with the Silver Trust Silver set given to Downing Street in the 1990s. (See the State Dining room with the Silver Trust Silver in use for a luncheon[124]) Above the fireplace, overlooking the room, is a massive portrait by John Shackleton of George II, the king who originally gave the building to the First Lord of the Treasury in 1732.[125] Celebrity chefs such as Nigella Lawson have cooked for Prime Ministers' guests using the small kitchen next door. Entering through the Small Dining Room, Blair used this room for his monthly press conferences.[126][127][128] (See Simon Schama's Tour of Downing Street. Pt 3: The Dining Room)[129] (See The State Dining Room c1930: View toward the entrance[130][131] and View from the entrance[132] and also a more modern view[133])[134]

Great kitchen

 
Great kitchen, 1931

The great kitchen located in the basement was another part of the renovations begun in 1783, probably also under the direction of Robert Taylor.[37] Seldom seen by anyone other than staff, the space is two storeys high with a huge arched window and vaulted ceiling. Traditionally, it has always had a chopping block work table in the centre that is 14 feet (4.3 m) long, 3 feet (0.91 m) wide and 5 inches (13 cm) thick.

Smaller Dining or Breakfast Room

Above Taylor's vaulted kitchen, between the Pillared Room and the State Dining room, Soane created a Smaller Dining Room (sometimes called the Breakfast Room) that still exists. To build it, Soane removed the chimney from the kitchen to put a door in the room. He then moved the chimney to the east side, running a Y-shaped split flue inside the walls up either side of one of the windows above. The room therefore has a unique architectural feature: over the fireplace there is a window instead of the usual chimney breast.[116]

With its flat unadorned ceiling, simple mouldings and deep window seats, the Small Dining Room is intimate and comfortable. Usually furnished with a mahogany table seating only eight, Prime Ministers have often used this room when dining with family or when entertaining special guests on more personal state occasions.[135] (See the Small Dining or Breakfast Room c1927. The double doors behind the table lead to the State Dining Room.[136])[137]

Terrace and garden

 
Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin (seated centre with his legs crossed) poses in the garden of Number Ten with representatives to the 1923 Imperial Conference.

The terrace and garden were constructed in 1736 shortly after Walpole moved into Number 10. The terrace, extending across the back, provides a full view of St James's Park. The garden is dominated by a half-acre (0.2 ha) open lawn which wraps around Numbers 10 and 11 in an L-shape. No longer "fitted with variety Walle fruit and diverse fruit trees" as it was in the 17th century, there is now a centrally located flower bed around a holly tree surrounded by seats. Tubs of flowers line the steps from the terrace; around the walls are rose beds with flowering and evergreen shrubs.[125][138] (See North elevation of Number 10 with steps leading to the garden[139])[140] The terrace and garden have provided a casual setting for many gatherings of First Lords with foreign dignitaries, Cabinet ministers, guests, and staff. Prime Minister Tony Blair, for example, hosted a farewell reception in 2007 for his staff on the terrace. John Major announced his 1997 resignation as leader of the Conservative Party in the garden. Churchill called his secretaries the "garden girls" because their offices overlook the garden.[141] It was also the location of the first press conference announcing the Coalition Government between David Cameron's Conservatives and Nick Clegg's Liberal Democrats.[142]

Furnishings

Number 10 is filled with fine paintings, sculptures, busts and furniture. Only a few are permanent features. Most are on loan. About half belong to the Government Art Collection. The remainder are on loan from private collectors and from public galleries such as the National Portrait Gallery, the Tate Gallery, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Gallery.[143] (See works from the Government Art Collection currently on display at Number 10[144])

About a dozen paintings are changed annually. More extensive changes occur when a new Prime Minister takes office and redecorates.[145] These redecorations may reflect both individual taste as well as make a political statement. Edward Heath borrowed French paintings from the National Gallery and was loaned two Renoirs from a private collector. When Margaret Thatcher arrived in 1979 she insisted that the artwork had to be British and that it celebrate "British achievers". As a former chemist, she took pleasure in devoting the Small Dining Room to a collection of portraits of British scientists, such as Joseph Priestley and Humphry Davy. During the 1990s John Major converted the first floor anteroom into a small gallery of modern art, mostly British. He also introduced several paintings by John Constable and J. M. W. Turner, Britain's two best known 19th-century artists, and cricketing paintings by Archibald Stuart-Wortley including a portrait of one of England's most celebrated batsmen W. G. Grace.[146]

In addition to outstanding artwork, Number 10 contains many exceptional pieces of furniture either owned by the house or on loan. One of the most striking and unusual is the already mentioned Chippendale hooded guard's chair that sits in a corner of the entrance hall. To its left is a long case clock by Benson of Whitehaven. A similar clock by Samuel Whichcote of London stands in the Cabinet anteroom. The White State Drawing Room contains examples of Adam furniture. The Green State Drawing Room contains mostly Chippendale furniture including a card table that belonged to Clive of India and a mahogany desk that is thought to have belonged to William Pitt the Younger and used by him during the Napoleonic Wars. In addition to the large carpet previously described, the Pillared State Drawing Room also contains a marble-topped table by Kent. The State Dining Room contains a mahogany sideboard by Adam.[147][note 2] Until the late 19th century, Prime Ministers were required to furnish Number 10 at their own expense with furniture, tableware, china, linens, curtains and decorations. This arrangement began to change in 1877 when Benjamin Disraeli took up residency. He insisted that the Treasury should bear the cost of furnishings at least in the public areas. The Treasury agreed and a complex accounting procedure was developed whereby the outgoing prime minister was required to pay for "wear and tear" on furnishings that had been purchased by the Treasury. This system was used until November 1897 when the Treasury assumed responsibility for purchasing and maintaining almost all of the furnishings in both the public and private areas except decorating the walls with art work. In 1924 when Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald took office, he did not own nor have the means to buy an extensive art collection. He had the Government Art Collection loan pieces. The arrangement became the standard practice.[148]

250th anniversary: 1985

 
Queen Elizabeth II in Downing Street in 1985, to mark the 250th anniversary of Robert Walpole's occupancy of No.10

In 1985, Number 10 was 250 years old. To celebrate, Thatcher hosted a grand dinner in the State Dining Room for her living predecessors: Harold Macmillan, Alec Douglas-Home, Harold Wilson, Edward Heath and James Callaghan.[149] Also in attendance were Elizabeth II and representatives of the families of every 20th-century Prime Minister since H. H. Asquith, including Lady Olwen Carey Evans (daughter of David Lloyd George), Lady Leonora Howard (daughter of Stanley Baldwin), and Clarissa Avon (widow of Anthony Eden and niece of Winston Churchill).[150]

That same year, the Leisure Circle published Christopher Jones' book No. 10 Downing Street, The Story of a House. In the foreword, Thatcher described her feelings for Number 10: "How much I wish that the public ... could share with me the feeling of Britain's historic greatness which pervades every nook and cranny of this complicated and meandering old building ... All Prime Ministers are intensely aware that, as tenants and stewards of No. 10 Downing Street, they have in their charge one of the most precious jewels in the nation's heritage".[4]

Security after the 1991 bombing

 
Gates at the main entrance of Downing Street

For most of its history, Number 10 was accessible to the public. Early security consisted of two police officers: one stood guard outside the door; the other was stationed inside to open it. Since the door had no keyhole, the inside officer depended upon the lone outside officer. During Thatcher's premiership, terrorist threats led to the implementation of a second level of security. Guarded gates were added at both ends of the street. Visitors could then be screened before approaching the door.

Despite the added measure, on 7 February 1991, the Provisional IRA used a van they parked in Whitehall to launch a mortar shell at Number 10. It exploded in the back garden, while Prime Minister John Major was holding a Cabinet meeting. Major moved to Admiralty House while repairs were being completed. This led to the addition of guardhouses at the street ends as well as other less visible measures. Each guardhouse is staffed by several armed police officers. The Metropolitan Police Service's Diplomatic Protection Group (DPG) provides overall protection and acts on intelligence from MI5.

Office of the Prime Minister

The Prime Minister's Office, for which the terms Downing Street and Number 10 are metonymous, lies within the 10 Downing Street building and is part of the Cabinet Office.[151] It is staffed by a mix of career civil servants and special advisers. The highest ranking civil servant position is the principal private secretary to the prime minister, currently Nick Catsaras.[152] From 2010 to 2012 and from May to September 2020, there was a Downing Street Permanent Secretary, held by Jeremy Heywood and Simon Case respectively, which ranked above the principal private Secretary to the prime minister. From 1997 to 2019 and since 2020, the most senior special adviser post is the Downing Street chief of staff but this job title was out of use from July 2019 to November 2020 when the role was split into two positions with Dominic Cummings[153][154][155] who served as the chief adviser to the prime minister, and Edward Lister[156][157] who served as the chief strategic adviser to the prime minister. Lister served as acting chief of staff, but was replaced by Dan Rosenfield, who officially assumed the role in January 2021.[158] Though Number 10 is formally part of the Cabinet Office, it reports directly to the Cabinet Secretary, who is currently Simon Case.

In her report about parties on Government premises during the COVID pandemic, Sue Gray concluded that the size of the Downing Street operation had increased without the structures to support them, and "too much responsibility and expectation is placed on the senior official whose principal function is ... support of the Prime Minister". She said this needed to be addressed as a priority, and Boris Johnson agreed to the Office of the Prime Minister becoming a Government department.[159] Several changes in staffing took place early in February 2022. The role of Downing Street Permanent Secretary was revived, with Samantha Jones holding the position on an interim basis.[160]

Current positions within the Office of the Prime Minister

List of current civil service and senior special adviser positions serving Prime Minister Rishi Sunak:

Position Current holder Term started
Downing Street Chief of Staff Liam Booth-Smith 25 October 2022
Downing Street Deputy Chief of Staff Will Tanner 4 November 2022
Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister Elizabeth Perelman 25 October 2022
Downing Street Permanent Secretary and Chief Operating Officer Samantha Jones 3 February 2022
Downing Street Director of Communications Amber de Botton 29 October 2022
Downing Street Press Secretary Nerissa Chesterfield 25 October 2022
Political Secretary to the Prime Minister James Forsyth
Prime Minister's Official Spokesperson
Downing Street Director of Policy Eleanor Shawcross-Wolfson 25 October 2022
Prime Minister's Chief Business Adviser
Downing Street Director of Legislative Affairs
Downing Street Head of Operations
Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Prime Minister Craig Williams MP 26 October 2022

History

Pre-2001 organisation:

  • The No. 10 Private Office (government coordination, diary management and correspondence);
  • The No. 10 Press Office (press and public relations) – The press office has grown in significance as media attention on the PM has intensified. Thatcher's press secretary Bernard Ingham was one of her most important advisors. Alastair Campbell's influence as Blair's press secretary was even greater;
  • The No. 10 Policy Unit (policy review and advice);
  • The No. 10 Political Office (party political liaison and constituency affairs).

The office was reorganised in 2001 into three directorates:

  • Policy and government
    Took over the functions of the private office and policy unit. Prepares advice for the PM and coordinates development and implementation of policy across departments.
  • Communication and strategy
    • Press office: responsible for relations with the media
    • Direct communications unit
    • Research and information unit: provides factual information to No. 10
    • Strategy unit
  • Government and political relations
    Handles party and constituency affairs

Changes were intended to strengthen the PM's office. However, some commentators have suggested that Blair's reforms have created something similar to a Prime Minister's Department.[a] The reorganisation brought about the fusion of the old Prime Minister's Office and other Cabinet Office teams, with a number of units (including the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit) now reporting directly into the Prime Minister's Office. Since 2005, Number 10's Direct Communication Unit has not used its staff's real names on signed correspondence to MPs and members of the public; this is for security reasons.[162]

However, the Institute for Government has written that the Cabinet Office (of which the Prime Minister's Office is a component) "is a long way from becoming a fully fledged premier's department", primarily based on the fact that the prime minister "largely lacks the direct policy responsibilities, either in statute or by convention under the Royal Prerogative, possessed by secretaries of state, who have substantial budgets voted to them by Parliament."[163]

See also

Notes

Footnotes

  1. ^ At the end of the 19th century, Lord Salisbury, the last Prime Minister not to concurrently hold the post of First Lord of the Treasury, lived in his town house on Arlington Street. During Salisbury's last ministry from 1895 to 1902, the First Lord was his nephew and successor Arthur Balfour, the Leader of the House of Commons; it was thus Balfour who resided in Number 10 in this time.[48]
  2. ^ Until the late 19th century, Prime Ministers were required to furnish Number 10 at their own expense with furniture, tableware, china, linens, curtains and decorations. This arrangement began to change in 1877 when Benjamin Disraeli took up residency. He insisted that the Treasury should bear the cost of furnishings at least in the public areas. The Treasury agreed and a complex accounting procedure was developed whereby the outgoing Prime Minister was required to pay for "wear and tear" on furnishings that had been purchased by the Treasury. This system was used until November 1897 when the Treasury assumed responsibility for purchasing and maintaining almost all of the furnishings in both the public and private areas except decorating the walls with art work. In 1924 when Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald took office, he did not own nor have the means to buy an extensive art collection. He had the Government Art Collection loan pieces. The arrangement became the standard practice.[164]
  1. ^ The Times political correspondent Peter Riddell discussed the consequences of the reform in an article entitled "New look behind the revolving doors of power" in which he observed "Mr Blair has not formally set up a Prime Minister's Department, in order to avoid charges of presidentialism, but he has created one in all but name in 10 Downing Street".[161]

Citations

  1. ^ Historic England. "10 Downing Street (1210759)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  2. ^ "First Lord of the Treasury - GOV.UK". www.gov.uk. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  3. ^ "10 Surprising facts about Number 10 Downing Street". BBC. 2020.
  4. ^ a b Jones, in letter from Margaret Thatcher used as a preface to the book.
  5. ^ See Cabinet Office letter dated 9 October 2018 in response to Freedom of Information request of 11 September 2018
  6. ^ Bolitho, pp. 16–21.
  7. ^ Jones, pp. 24–32.
  8. ^ Feely, pp. 17–31.
  9. ^ a b Minney, p. 28.
  10. ^ Feely, pp. 28–31.
  11. ^ Jones, p. 41.
  12. ^ Bolitho, p. 20.
  13. ^ a b Minney, p. 34.
  14. ^ Jones, p.32.
  15. ^ Feeley, p. 32.
  16. ^ Jones, see back cover picture credited to Robert Hill @ BBC.
  17. ^ Minney, p. 23.
  18. ^ Jones, pp. 16–18.
  19. ^ Minney, pp. 23–24.
  20. ^ Minney, p. 24.
  21. ^ Minney, pp. 24–25.
  22. ^ Jones, pp. 20–21.
  23. ^ a b Jones, p. 21.
  24. ^ "fig50". British History Online. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  25. ^ a b c British History Online, From: 'No. 10, Downing Street', Survey of London: volume 14: St Margaret, Westminster, part III: Whitehall II (1931), pp. 113–141. Date accessed: 22 July 2008.
  26. ^ The diarist Pepys recorded a high tide when Whitehall was under water and it is known that buildings in the area require deep foundations to avoid settling.
  27. ^ Minney, p. 25.
  28. ^ Jones, p. 23.
  29. ^ "fig51". British History Online. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  30. ^ Jones, Nigel R. (2005). Architecture of England, Scotland, and Wales. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-313-31850-4.
  31. ^ Minney, p. 33.
  32. ^ "No. 10, Downing Street | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  33. ^ See letter, dated, "Downing Street, 30 June 1742", from Horace Walpole to Horace Mann: "I am writing to you in one of the charming rooms towards the Park: it is I am willing to enjoy this sweet corner while I may, for we are soon to quit it. Mrs. Sandys came yesterday to give us warning; Lord Wilmington has lent it to them. Sir Robert might have had it for his own at first: but would only take it as First Lord of the Treasury. He goes into a small house of his own in Arlington Street, opposite to where we formerly lived". (Horace Walpole's Letters, ed. Cunningham, 1857, I, p. 246.) British History Online, From: 'No. 10, Downing Street', Survey of London: volume 14: St Margaret, Westminster, part III: Whitehall II (1931), pp. 113–141. Date accessed: 21 July 2008.
  34. ^ Feely, p. 34.
  35. ^ Bolitho, p. 25.
  36. ^ Minney, p. 50.
  37. ^ a b Seldon, p. 16.
  38. ^ a b Jones, p. 46.
  39. ^ Miney, p. 47.
  40. ^ Minney, pp. 46–47.
  41. ^ Blick, Andrew (2010). Premiership : the development, nature and power of the British Prime Minister. G. W. Jones. Exeter: Imprint Academic. pp. 134–135 and 144-145. ISBN 978-1-84540-647-9. OCLC 742600769.
  42. ^ a b Jones, p. 51.
  43. ^ Minney, p. 29.
  44. ^ Jones, p. 52. Henry Pelham, for example, had his own spacious home and had no need for Number 10. In a piece of "blatant political corruption", he allowed his son-in-law, Henry Clinton, Earl of Lincoln, to live there from 1745 to 1753 even though Clinton was not involved in politics.
  45. ^ Minney, pp. 173 and 179. Lord Liverpool assigned it to his two Chancellors of the Exchequer, Nicholas Vansittart (1812–1823) and Frederick Robinson (1823–1827).
  46. ^ British History Online, Letter (B.M. Addl. MS. 38292, f. 11) from Lord Liverpool to Charles Ellis, dated 22 January 1823, is of interest.

    When you spoke to me some time ago upon the subject of the House in Downing Street, I was under the impression, as you were yourself, that the house was the King's & that he might dispose of it in any manner he might think proper. Upon Inquiry, however, it appeared that the House was attached to the Treasury as a Part of the Office. That the First Lord of the Treasury occupies it if he thinks proper. If he declines it, the Chancellor of the Exchequer occupies it, not as Chancellor of the Exchequer, but as second in the Commission of the Treasury. That if he declined it, it would go to the next in the Commission, or it might possibly be disposed of by the Board to any Member or Officer of the Treasury; but could not, & never has been detached from it. You are mistaken in supposing that Mr. Vansittart is the only Chancellor of the Exchequer who, without being first Lord of the Treasury, occupied it. Lord North certainly occupied it during the two years he was Chancellor of the Exchequer only. I believe Mr. Charles Townshend occupied it, but I know Mr. Dowdeswell did, & it is remarkable that he is, I believe, the only instance of a Chancellor of the Exchequer upon Record who was not in the Cabinet. The House stands in fact upon the same footing as the Houses of the Admiralty, which could not be assigned to any Person not belonging to that office.

  47. ^ Bolitho, p. 116. A few peers lived in Number 10 out of necessity. The Duke of Wellington, for example, grudgingly lived there for eighteen months between 1828 and 1830 because his own home, Apsley House, was undergoing extensive renovations. He left as soon as it was finished.
  48. ^ Minney, p. 322.
  49. ^ Minney, pp. 83–84.
  50. ^ a b Minney, p. 117.
  51. ^ fig52, british-history.ac.uk
  52. ^ a b Jones, p. 71.
  53. ^ Jones, p. 72.
  54. ^ figure0748-111, british-history.ac.uk
  55. ^ British History Online, From: 'Plate 111: No. 10, Downing Street: plan of alterations in 1781', Survey of London: volume 14: St Margaret, Westminster, part III: Whitehall II (1931), pp. 111. Date accessed: 22 July 2008.
  56. ^ Minney, pp. 182–183.
  57. ^ Seldon, p. 23
  58. ^ Jones, p. 96.
  59. ^ figure0748-113, british-history.ac.uk
  60. ^ figure0748-112, british-history.ac.uk
  61. ^ Holmes, Richard T. (2010). Churchill's Bunker: The Cabinet War Rooms and the Culture of Secrecy in Wartime London. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-16046-8.
  62. ^ Holmes, pp. 106–107
  63. ^ Minney, p. 409.
  64. ^ Jones, p. 156.
  65. ^ "Downing St? We'd really rather not". This Is London. 19 May 2010. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
  66. ^ Minney, p. 393.
  67. ^ Minney, p. 402.
  68. ^ Minney, pp. 333–334
  69. ^ a b Minney, p. 428.
  70. ^ Jones, pp. 153–154.
  71. ^ a b Seldon, p. 32.
  72. ^ Minney, pp. 429–430.
  73. ^ "Sir Edgar Beck". The Telegraph. London. 9 August 2000. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  74. ^ The Times, Downing Street Reconstruction to Cost £1,250,000, December 1959
  75. ^ Jones, p. 154.
  76. ^ a b Seldon, p. 33.
  77. ^ Jones, pp. 154–155.
  78. ^ Minney, pp. 429–433.
  79. ^ Seldon, p. 34.
  80. ^ a b Mosley, James. "Number Ten". Typefoundry (blog). Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  81. ^ Seldon, p. 35.
  82. ^ Seldon, p. 36.
  83. ^ Seldon, p. 37.
  84. ^ "Electoral Commission to investigate Boris Johnson's Downing Street flat renovations". BBC News. 28 April 2021. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  85. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 January 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  86. ^ 10 Downing Street: The World's Most Famous Front Door, IronmongeryDirect (March 2015).
  87. ^ a b Minney, p. 84.
  88. ^ figure0748-118-a, british-history.ac.uk
  89. ^ British History Online: From: 'Plate 118: No. 10, Downing Street: main doorway and kitchen', Survey of London: volume 14: St Margaret, Westminster, part III: Whitehall II (1931), pp. 118. Date accessed: 20 July 2008.
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References

  • Bolitho, Hector (1957). No. 10 Downing Street: 1660–1900. Hutchinson. OCLC 1712032.
  • Blick, Andrew and Jones, George (2010). Premiership: The Development, Nature and Power of the Office of the British Prime Minister, Imprint Academic, ISBN 9781845401689
  • Feely, Terence (1982). No. 10: The Private Lives of Six Prime Ministers. Sidgwick and Jackson. ISBN 978-0-283-98893-6.
  • Holmes, Richard (2009). Churchill's Bunker: The Secret Headquarters at the Heart of Britain's Victory. Profile Books. OCLC 449854872.
  • Jones, Christopher (1985). No. 10 Downing Street: The Story of a House. The Leisure Circle. ISBN 978-0-563-20441-1.
  • Minney, R.J. (1963). No. 10 Downing Street: A House in History. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. OCLC 815822725.
  • Seldon, Anthony (1999). No. 10 Downing Street: The Illustrated History. London: HarperCollins Illustrated. ISBN 978-0-00-414073-5.
  • Smith, Goldwin (1990). A Constitutional and Legal History of England. New York: Dorset Press. OCLC 498777.

External links

  • Official website  
    • Prime Ministers in History
    • History of the building
    • Virtual Tour of 10 Downing Street
  • Photos from the Prime Minister's Office
  • 10 Downing Street section from the Survey of London
    • Plans of 10, 11 and 12 Downing Street (published 1931): ground; first; second and third floors
  • 10 Downing Street on Facebook
  • Virtual Tour Virtual tour of seven Downing Street rooms and the garden.

downing, street, london, also, known, colloquially, united, kingdom, number, official, residence, executive, office, first, lord, treasury, usually, convention, prime, minister, united, kingdom, along, with, adjoining, cabinet, office, whitehall, headquarters,. 10 Downing Street in London also known colloquially in the United Kingdom as Number 10 is the official residence and executive office of the first lord of the treasury usually by convention the prime minister of the United Kingdom 2 Along with the adjoining Cabinet Office at 70 Whitehall it is the headquarters of the Government of the United Kingdom 10 Downing StreetLocation in WestminsterGeneral informationArchitectural styleGeorgianTown or cityCity of WestminsterLondon SW1CountryUnited KingdomCoordinates51 30 12 N 0 07 39 W 51 5033 N 0 1275 W 51 5033 0 1275 Coordinates 51 30 12 N 0 07 39 W 51 5033 N 0 1275 W 51 5033 0 1275Current tenantsRishi Sunak Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Larry Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office Listed Building Grade IOfficial name10 Downing Street SW1A 2AADesignated14 January 1970Reference no 1210759 1 Construction started1682 341 years ago 1682 Completed1684 339 years ago 1684 Design and constructionArchitect s Kenton CouseSituated in Downing Street in the City of Westminster London Number 10 is over 300 years old and contains approximately 100 rooms A private residence for the prime minister s use occupies the third floor and there is a kitchen in the basement The other floors contain offices and conference reception sitting and dining rooms where the prime minister works and where government ministers national leaders and foreign dignitaries are met and hosted At the rear is an interior courtyard and a terrace overlooking a 1 2 acre 0 2 ha garden Adjacent to St James s Park Number 10 is approximately 3 4 mile 1 2 km from Buckingham Palace the London residence of the British Monarch and near the Palace of Westminster the meeting place of both Houses of Parliament Originally three houses Number 10 was offered to Robert Walpole by King George II in 1732 3 Walpole accepted on the condition that the gift was to the office of First Lord of the Treasury The post of First Lord of the Treasury has for much of the 18th and 19th centuries and invariably since 1905 been held by the prime minister Walpole commissioned William Kent to join the three houses and it is this larger house that is known as Number 10 Downing Street Despite its size and convenient location near to Parliament few early prime ministers lived at 10 Downing Street Costly to maintain neglected and run down Number 10 was scheduled to be demolished several times but the property survived and became linked with many statesmen and events in British history In 1985 Margaret Thatcher said Number 10 had become one of the most precious jewels in the national heritage 4 10 Downing Street is Government property Its registered legal title is held in the name of the secretary of state for levelling up housing and communities the secretary of state is a corporation sole 5 Contents 1 History of the building 1 1 Original Number 10 1 2 History of the House at the Back before 1733 1 3 First politician and head of government in the house 1 4 First Lord s house 1733 1735 1 5 10 Downing Street and Kent s Treasury Building 1 6 A vast awkward house 1735 1902 1 7 Revival and recognition 1902 1960 1 8 Rebuilding 1960 1990 1 9 1990 present 2 10 Downing Street today 3 Rooms and special features 3 1 Front door and entrance hall 3 2 Main staircase 3 3 Cabinet Room 3 4 State drawing rooms 3 4 1 Pillared State Drawing Room 3 4 2 Terracotta State Drawing Room 3 4 3 White State Drawing Room 3 5 State Dining Room 3 6 Great kitchen 3 7 Smaller Dining or Breakfast Room 3 8 Terrace and garden 3 9 Furnishings 4 250th anniversary 1985 5 Security after the 1991 bombing 6 Office of the Prime Minister 6 1 Current positions within the Office of the Prime Minister 6 2 History 7 See also 8 Notes 8 1 Footnotes 8 2 Citations 9 References 10 External linksHistory of the building EditOriginal Number 10 Edit Number 10 Downing Street was originally three properties a mansion overlooking St James s Park called the House at the Back a town house behind it and a cottage The town house from which the modern building gets its name was one of several built by George Downing between 1682 and 1684 Downing a notorious spy for Oliver Cromwell and later Charles II invested in property and acquired considerable wealth 6 7 8 In 1654 he purchased the lease on land south of St James s Park adjacent to the House at the Back within walking distance of parliament Downing planned to build a row of terraced town houses for persons of good quality to inhabit in 9 The street on which he built them now bears his name and the largest became part of Number 10 Downing Street Portrait of George Downing painted c 1675 1690 by Thomas Smith The Fogg Museum Straightforward as the investment seemed it proved otherwise The Hampden family had a lease on the land that they refused to relinquish Downing fought their claim but failed and had to wait 30 years before he could build 10 When the Hampden lease expired Downing received permission to build on land further west to take advantage of more recent property developments The new warrant issued in 1682 reads Sir George Downing is authorised to build new and more houses subject to the proviso that it be not built any nearer than 14 feet of the wall of the said Park at the West end thereof 9 Between 1682 and 1684 Downing built a cul de sac of two storey town houses with coach houses stables and views of St James s Park Over the years the addresses changed several times In 1787 Number 5 became Number 10 11 Downing employed Christopher Wren to design the houses Although large they were put up quickly and cheaply on soft soil with shallow foundations Winston Churchill wrote that Number 10 was shaky and lightly built by the profiteering contractor whose name they bear 12 The upper end of the Downing Street cul de sac closed off the access to St James s Park making the street quiet and private An advertisement in 1720 described it as a pretty open Place especially at the upper end where are four or five very large and well built Houses fit for Persons of Honour and Quality each House having a pleasant Prospect into St James s Park with a Tarras Walk 13 The cul de sac had several distinguished residents George Granville 1st Baron Lansdowne from 1692 to 1696 and the Earl of Grantham from 1699 to 1703 13 Downing did not live in Downing Street 14 15 In 1675 he retired to Cambridge where he died in 1684 a few months after building was completed In 1800 the wealth he had accumulated was used to found Downing College Cambridge as had been his wish should his descendants fail in the male line Downing s portrait hangs in the entrance hall of Number 10 16 History of the House at the Back before 1733 Edit The Palace of Whitehall by Hendrick Danckerts c 1660 1679 Viewed from St James s Park the House at the Back is on the right the octagonal building next to it is the Cockpit The House at the Back the largest of the three houses which were combined to make Number 10 was a mansion built in about 1530 next to Whitehall Palace Rebuilt expanded and renovated many times since it was originally one of several buildings that made up the Cockpit Lodgings so called because they were attached to an octagonal structure used for cock fighting Early in the 17th century the Cockpit was converted to a concert hall and theatre after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 some of the first cabinet meetings were held there secretly 17 For many years the House at the Back was the home of Thomas Knevett Keeper of Whitehall Palace famous for capturing Guy Fawkes in 1605 and foiling his plot to assassinate King James I The previous year Knevett had moved into a house next door approximately where Number 10 is today 18 19 From that time the House at the Back was usually occupied by members of the royal family or the government Princess Elizabeth eldest daughter of King James I lived there from 1604 until 1613 when she married Frederick V Elector Palatine and moved to Heidelberg She was the grandmother of King George I the Elector of Hanover who became King of Great Britain in 1714 and was the great grandmother of King George II who presented the house to Walpole in 1732 20 George Monck 1st Duke of Albemarle the general responsible for the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660 lived there from 1660 until his death in 1671 As head of the Great Treasury Commission of 1667 1672 Albemarle transformed accounting methods and allowed the Crown greater control over expenses His secretary George Downing who built Downing Street is thought to have created these changes Albemarle is the first treasury minister to have lived in what became the home of the First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister 21 In 1671 George Villiers 2nd Duke of Buckingham took possession when he joined the Cabal Ministry At considerable expense Buckingham rebuilt the house The result was a spacious mansion lying parallel to Whitehall Palace with a view of St James Park from its garden 22 After Buckingham retired in 1676 Lady Charlotte Fitzroy Charles II s daughter moved in when she married Edward Lee 1st Earl of Lichfield The Crown authorised extensive rebuilding which included adding a storey thus giving it three main floors an attic and basement This structure can be seen today as the rear section of Number 10 23 See Plan of the Premises Granted to the Earl and Countess of Lichfield in 1677 24 25 The likely reason that repair was required is that the house had settled in the swampy ground near the Thames causing structural damage 26 Like Downing Street it rested on a shallow foundation a design error that caused problems until 1960 when the modern Number 10 was rebuilt on deep pilings 27 The Lichfields followed James II into exile after the Glorious Revolution Two years later in 1690 William III and Mary II gave the House at the Back to Hendrik van Nassau Ouwerkerk a Dutch general who had assisted in securing the Crown for the Prince of Orange Nassau who Anglicised his name to Overkirk lived there until his death in 1708 23 The House at the Back reverted to the Crown when Lady Overkirk died in 1720 The Treasury issued an order for repairing and fitting it up in the best and most substantial manner at a cost of 2 522 The work included The Back passage into Downing street to be repaired and a new door a New Necessary House to be made To take down the Useless passage formerly made for the Maids of Honour to go into Downing Street when the Queen lived at the Cockpit To New Cast a great Lead Cistern amp pipes and to lay the Water into the house amp a new frame for ye Cistern 28 See Buildings on the Site of the Cockpit and Number 10 Downing Street c1720 25 29 The name of the House at the Back changed with the occupant from Lichfield House to Overkirk House in 1690 to Bothmer House in 1720 30 First politician and head of government in the house Edit Johann Caspar von Bothmer Premier Minister of the Electorate of Hanover head of the German Chancery and adviser to George I and II took up residency in 1720 Although Bothmer complained about the ruinous Condition of the Premises 31 he lived there until his death in 1732 Even though Count von Bothmer was not British he was a subject of George I and George II and the first politician and head of a government who resided in 10 Downing Street 32 First Lord s house 1733 1735 Edit Robert Walpole accepted George II s gift of the house at the back and two Downing Street houses on behalf of the office of the First Lord of the Treasury When Count Bothmer died ownership of the House at the Back reverted to the Crown George II took this opportunity to offer it to Robert Walpole often called the first prime minister as a gift for his services to the nation stabilising its finances keeping it at peace and securing the Hanoverian succession Coincidentally the King had obtained the leases on two Downing Street properties including Number 10 and added these to his proposed gift Walpole did not accept the gift for himself 33 He proposed and the King agreed that the Crown give the properties to the Office of First Lord of the Treasury Walpole would live there as the incumbent First Lord but would vacate it for the next one 34 To enlarge the new house Walpole persuaded Mr Chicken the tenant of a cottage next door to move to another house in Downing Street 35 This small house and the mansion at the back were then incorporated into Number 10 Walpole commissioned William Kent to convert them into one building Kent joined the larger houses by building a two storey structure between them consisting of one long room on the ground floor and several above The remaining interior space was converted into a courtyard He connected the Downing Street houses with a corridor Having united the structures Kent gutted and rebuilt the interior He then surmounted the third storey of the house at the back with a pediment To allow Walpole quicker access to Parliament Kent closed the north side entrance from St James s Park and made the door in Downing Street the main entrance The rebuilding took three years On 23 September 1735 the London Daily Post announced that Yesterday the Right Hon Sir Robert Walpole with his Lady and Family removed from their House in St James s Square to his new House adjoining to the Treasury in St James s Park 36 The cost of conversion is unknown Originally estimated at 8 000 the final cost probably exceeded 20 000 37 Walpole did not enter through the now famous door that would not be installed until forty years later Kent s door was modest belying the spacious elegance beyond The First Lord s new albeit temporary home had sixty rooms with hardwood and marble floors crown moulding elegant pillars and marble mantelpieces those on the west side with views of St James s Park One of the largest rooms was a study measuring forty feet by twenty with enormous windows overlooking St James s Park My Lord s Study 38 as Kent labelled it in his drawings would later become the Cabinet Room where Prime Ministers meet with the Cabinet ministers 39 Shortly after moving in Walpole ordered that a portion of the land outside his study be converted into a terrace and garden Letters patent issued in April 1736 state that a piece of garden ground situated in his Majesty s park of St James s amp belonging amp adjoining to the house now inhabited by the Right Honourable the Chancellor of His Majesty s Exchequer hath been lately made amp fitted up at the Charge of the Crown The same document confirmed that Number 10 Downing Street was meant to be annexed amp united to the Office of his Majesty s Treasury amp to be amp to remain for the Use amp Habitation of the first Commissioner of his Majesty s Treasury for the time being 40 10 Downing Street and Kent s Treasury Building Edit At about the same time that William Kent was combining the Downing Street townhouse with the house at the back he was also commissioned to design and construct a new Treasury building on the site of the old Tudor Cockpit located behind Downing Street This project was completed in 1737 and included corridors connecting the Treasury building with Ten Downing Street allowing Walpole as Chancellor of the Exchequer as well as First Lord of the Treasury and Prime Minister direct and convenient access to the Treasury offices In effect the Treasury building became an annex of Ten Downing Street and its staff worked directly for Walpole on treasury patronage and other public business This arrangement remained in effect until the middle of the 19th century and until then all Prime Ministers who were also Chancellor took advantage of it After Prime Minister Robert Peel gave up being Chancellor in 1841 and this separation of positions gradually became a convention of the constitution a locked door was installed between the buildings limiting the Prime Minister s access to the Treasury and its staff Due to bomb damage in 1940 the Treasury relocated to the Government Offices Great George Street Then in 1963 the Cabinet Office including the Prime Minister s Office and later the Civil Service with the Prime minister as Minister for the Civil Service moved into the renovated Kent Treasury Building Under Prime Minister Blair the locked door symbolically and physically dividing No 10 from the Cabinet Office was passed through with such frequency that its meaning was lost 41 A vast awkward house 1735 1902 Edit William Pitt the Younger lived in Number 10 for twenty years longer than any Prime Minister before or since Walpole lived in Number 10 until 1742 Although he had accepted it on behalf of future First Lords of the Treasury it would be 21 years before any of his successors chose to live there the five who followed Walpole preferred their own homes This was the pattern until the beginning of the 20th century Of the 31 First Lords from 1735 to 1902 only 16 including Walpole lived in Number 10 42 One reason many First Lords chose not to live in Number 10 was that most owned London town houses superior in size and quality To them Number 10 was unimpressive Their possession of the house albeit temporary was a perquisite they could bestow as a political reward Most lent it to the Chancellor of the Exchequer others to lesser officials or to friends and relatives 43 44 45 46 47 note 1 Another reason for its unpopularity was that Number 10 was a hazardous place in which to live Prone to sinking because it was built on soft soil and a shallow foundation floors buckled and walls and chimneys cracked It became unsafe and frequently required repairs In 1766 for example Charles Townshend Chancellor of the Exchequer pointed out that the house was in a dilapidated condition His architect s letter to the Treasury stated we have caused the House in Downing Street belonging to the Treasury to be surveyed amp find the Walls of the old part of the said House next the street to be much decayed the Floors amp Chimneys much sunk from the level 49 Townshend ordered extensive repairs which were still incomplete eight years later A note from Lord North to the Office of Works dated September 1774 asks that the work on the front of the house which was begun by a Warrant from the Treasury dated 9 August 1766 50 should be finished See Kent s Treasury and No 10 Downing Street circa 1754 25 51 Treasury officials complained that the building was costing too much to maintain some suggested that it should be razed and a new house constructed on the site or elsewhere In 1782 the Board of Works reporting on the dangerous state of the old part of the House stated that no time be lost in taking down said building 52 In 1783 the Duke of Portland moved out because it was once again in need of repair A committee found that the money spent so far was insufficient This time the Board of Works declared that the Repairs Alterations amp Additions at the Chancellor of the Exchequer s House will amount to the sum of 5 580 exclusive of the sum for which they already have His Majesty s Warrant And praying a Warrant for the said sum of 5 580 and also praying an Imprest of that sum to enable them to pay the Workmen 52 This proved to be a gross underestimate the final bill was over 11 000 The Morning Herald fumed about the expense 500 pounds p a preceding the Great Repair and 11 000 the Great Repair itself So much has this extraordinary edifice cost the country For one moiety of the sum a much better dwelling might have been purchased 53 See Plan of the Design for Number 10 c1781 54 55 A few prime ministers however did enjoy living in Number 10 Lord North who conducted the war against the American Revolution lived there happily with his family from 1767 to 1782 William Pitt the Younger who made it his home for twenty years longer than any First Lord before or since from 1783 to 1801 and from 1804 to 1806 referred to it as My vast awkward house 50 While there Pitt reduced the national debt formed the Triple Alliance against France and won passage of the Act of Union that created the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Fredrick Robinson Lord Goderich took a special liking to the house in the late 1820s and spent state funds lavishly remodelling the interior 56 Nevertheless for 70 years following Pitt s death in 1806 Number 10 was rarely used as the First Lord s residence From 1834 to 1877 it was either vacant or used only for offices and meetings 42 Downing Street declined at the turn of the 19th century becoming surrounded with run down buildings dark alleys the scene of crime and prostitution Earlier the government had taken over the other Downing Street houses the Colonial Office occupied Number 14 in 1798 the Foreign Office was at Number 16 and the houses on either side the West India Department was in Number 18 and the Tithe Commissioners in Number 20 The houses deteriorated from neglect became unsafe and one by one were demolished By 1857 Downing Street s townhouses were all gone except for Number 10 Number 11 customarily the Chancellor of the Exchequer s residence and Number 12 used as offices for Government Whips In 1879 a fire destroyed the upper floors of Number 12 it was renovated but only as a single storey structure 57 58 See Numbers 10 11 and 12 Downing Street First Floor Plan 59 and Ground Floor Plan 60 Revival and recognition 1902 1960 Edit Winston Churchill emerging from Number 10 in 1943 When Lord Salisbury retired in 1902 his nephew Arthur James Balfour became Prime Minister It was an easy transition he was already First Lord of the Treasury and he was already living in Number 10 Balfour revived the custom that Number 10 is the First Lord and Prime Minister s official residence It has remained the custom since However there have been numerous times when prime ministers have unofficially lived elsewhere out of necessity or preference Winston Churchill for example had a great affection for Number 10 but during World War II he grudgingly slept in the hastily converted flat on the ground floor of what was then the New Public Office building NPO at nearby Storey s Gate 61 page needed The flat became known as the No 10 Annexe and lay above the much more comprehensive underground bunker now known as the Cabinet War Rooms and where he also had a bedroom very rarely used 62 To reassure the people that his government was functioning normally he insisted on being seen entering and leaving Number 10 occasionally and indeed continued to use it for meetings and dinners despite being urged not to 63 Harold Wilson during his second ministry from 1974 to 1976 lived in his home in Lord North Street because Mary Wilson wanted a proper home 64 However recognizing the symbolic importance of Number 10 he worked and held meetings there and entertained guests in the State Dining Room For most of his premiership Tony Blair lived in the more spacious residence above Number 11 to accommodate his relatively large family a wife and four children In May 2010 it was reported that David Cameron who also had four small children upon taking office would also take up actual residence above Number 11 and his Chancellor George Osborne above Number 10 65 The damaged drawing room of 10 Downing Street following a bomb raid in February 1944 Despite these exceptions Number 10 has been known as the prime minister s official home for over one hundred years By the turn of the 20th century photography and the penny press had linked Number 10 in the public mind with the premiership The introduction of films and television would strengthen this association Pictures of prime ministers with distinguished guests at the door became commonplace With or without the prime minister present visitors had their picture taken Suffragettes posed in front of the door when they petitioned H H Asquith for women s rights in 1913 a picture that became famous and was circulated around the world In 1931 Mohandas Gandhi wearing the traditional homespun dhoti posed leaving Number 10 after meeting with Ramsay MacDonald to discuss India s independence 66 This picture too became famous especially in India The freedom fighters could see their leader had been received in the prime minister s home Couse s elegant understated door stark black framed in cream white with a bold white 10 clearly visible was the perfect backdrop to record such events Prime Ministers made historic announcements from the front step Waving the Anglo German Agreement of Friendship Neville Chamberlain proclaimed Peace with honour in 1938 from Number 10 after his meeting with Adolf Hitler in Munich 67 During World War II Churchill was photographed many times emerging confidently from Number 10 holding up two fingers in the sign for Victory The building itself however did not escape the London Blitz entirely unscathed in February 1944 a bomb fell on nearby Horse Guards Parade and some of the drawing room windows were destroyed The symbol of British government Number 10 became a gathering place for protesters Emmeline Pankhurst and other suffragette leaders stormed Downing Street in 1908 68 anti Vietnam War protestors marched there in the 1960s as did anti Iraq and Afghanistan War protestors in the 2000s Rebuilding 1960 1990 Edit Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and U S President Ronald Reagan at 10 Downing Street in 1982 By the middle of the 20th century Number 10 was falling apart again The deterioration had been obvious for some time The number of people allowed in the upper floors was limited for fear the bearing walls would collapse The staircase had sunk several inches some steps were buckled and the balustrade was out of alignment Dry rot was widespread throughout The interior wood in the Cabinet Room s double columns was like sawdust Skirting boards doors sills and other woodwork were riddled and weakened with disease After reconstruction had begun miners dug down into the foundations and found that the huge wooden beams supporting the house had decayed 69 70 In 1958 a committee under the chairmanship of the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres was appointed by Harold Macmillan to investigate the condition of the house and make recommendations In the committee s report there was some discussion of tearing down the building and constructing an entirely new residence but because the prime minister s home had become an icon of British architecture like Windsor Castle Buckingham Palace and the Houses of Parliament the committee recommended that Number 10 and Numbers 11 and 12 should be rebuilt using as much of the original materials as possible 69 The interior would be photographed measured disassembled and restored A new foundation with deep pilings would be laid and the original buildings reassembled on top of it allowing for much needed expansion and modernisation Any original materials that were beyond repair such as the pair of double columns in the Cabinet Room would be replicated in detail This was a formidable undertaking the three buildings contained over 200 rooms spread out over five floors 71 The architect Raymond Erith carried out the design for this painstaking work 72 and the contractor that undertook it was John Mowlem amp Co 73 The Times reported initially that the cost for the project would be 400 000 After more careful studies were completed it was concluded that the total cost was likely to be 1 250 000 and would take two years to complete 74 In the end the cost was close to 3 000 000 and took almost three years due in large part to 14 labour strikes There were also delays when archaeological excavations uncovered important artefacts dating from Roman Saxon and medieval times 71 75 Macmillan lived in Admiralty House during the reconstruction The replica of the door with the Union Flag decoration in 2015 The new foundation was made of steel reinforced concrete with pilings sunk 6 to 18 feet 1 8 to 5 5 m 76 The new Number 10 consisted of about 60 new materials the remaining 40 was either restored or replicas of originals Many rooms and sections of the new building were reconstructed exactly as they were in the old Number 10 These included the garden floor the door and entrance foyer the stairway the hallway to the Cabinet Room the Cabinet Room the garden and terrace the Small and Large State Rooms and the three reception rooms The staircase however was rebuilt and simplified Steel was hidden inside the columns in the Pillared Drawing Room to support the floor above The upper floors were modernised and the third floor extended over Numbers 11 and 12 to allow more living space As many as 40 coats of paint were stripped from the elaborate cornices in the main rooms revealing details unseen for almost 200 years in some cases 76 When builders examined the exterior facade they discovered that the black colour visible even in photographs from the mid 19th century was misleading the bricks were actually yellow The black appearance was the product of two centuries of pollution To preserve the traditional look of recent times the newly cleaned yellow bricks were painted black to resemble their well known appearance 77 78 The thin tuckpointing mortar between the bricks is not painted and so contrasts with the bricks Although the reconstruction was generally considered an architectural triumph Erith was disappointed He complained openly during and after the project that the government had altered his design to save money I am heart broken by the result he said The whole project has been a frightful waste of money because it just has not been done properly The Ministry of Works has insisted on economy after economy I am bitterly disappointed with what has happened 79 Erith described the numbers on the front intended to be based on historical models as a mess and completely wrong to a fellow historian 80 Erith s concerns proved justified Within a few years dry rot was discovered especially in the main rooms due to inadequate waterproofing and a broken water pipe Extensive reconstruction again had to be undertaken in the late 1960s to resolve these problems 81 Further extensive repairs and remodelling commissioned by Margaret Thatcher were completed in the 1980s under the direction of Erith s associate Quinlan Terry 82 1990 present Edit Christmas tree outside Number 10 in 2021 The work done by Erith and Terry in the 1960s and 1980s represent the most extensive remodelling of Number 10 in recent times Since 1990 when the Terry reconstruction was completed repairing redecorating remodelling and updating the house has been ongoing as needed The IRA mortar attack in February 1991 led to extensive work being done to repair the damage mostly to the garden and exterior walls and to improve security In the summer of 1993 windows were rebuilt and in 1995 computer cables installed In 1997 the building was remodelled to provide extra space for the prime minister s greatly increased staff 83 To accommodate their large families both Tony Blair and David Cameron chose to live in the private residence above Number 11 rather than the smaller one above Number 10 In 2010 the Camerons completely modernised the 50 year old private kitchen in Number 11 In March 2020 Prime Minister Boris Johnson refurbished the residential apartment at Number 11 This became the subject of public controversy and an Electoral Commission inquiry took place into the financing of the refurbishment 84 10 Downing Street today EditThe current tenant of 10 Downing Street is Prime Minister Rishi Sunak It has been common practice in recent decades for the Prime Minister to live at Number 11 as its residential apartment is larger and for the Chancellor to live at Number 10 However the traditional residencies have not changed in official terms It presently houses the UK Cabinet Room in which Cabinet meetings in the UK take place chaired by the current Prime Minister Sunak It also houses the Prime Minister s Executive Office which deals with logistics and diplomacy concerning the government of the United Kingdom 85 Rooms and special features EditFront door and entrance hall Edit Mahatma Gandhi outside Number 10 in 1931 Dignitaries and visitors often pose for a photograph outside the door The front door of 10 Downing Street showing the letter box inscribed with First Lord of the Treasury Number 10 s door is the product of the renovations Charles Townshend ordered in 1766 it was probably not completed until 1772 Executed in the Georgian style by the architect Kenton Couse it is unassuming and narrow consisting of a single white stone step leading to a modest brick front The small six panelled door originally made of black oak is surrounded by cream coloured casing and adorned with a semicircular fanlight window Painted in white between the top and middle sets of panels is the number 10 The zero of the number 10 is painted in a very eccentric style in a 37 angle anticlockwise One theory is that this is in fact a capital O as found in the Roman s Trajan alphabet that was used by the Ministry of Works at the time 80 86 A black iron knocker in the shape of a lion s head is between the two middle panels below the knocker is a brass letter box with the inscription First Lord of the Treasury The doorbell is inscribed with PUSH although is rarely used in practice A black ironwork fence with spiked newel posts runs along the front of the house and up each side of the step to the door The fence rises above the step into a double swirled archway supporting an iron gas lamp surmounted by a crown 87 See The Entrance Door c1930 As seen from the outside 88 89 The door cannot be opened from the outside there is always someone inside to unlock the door 90 91 92 After the IRA mortar attack in 1991 the original black oak door was replaced by a blast proof steel one Regularly removed for refurbishment and replaced with a replica it is so heavy that it takes eight men to lift it The brass letterbox still bears the legend First Lord of the Treasury The original door was put on display in the Churchill Museum at the Cabinet War Rooms Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher with US First Lady Nancy Reagan in 1986 standing in the entrance hall Beyond the door Couse installed black and white marble tiles in the entrance hall that are still in use A guard s chair designed by Chippendale sits in one corner Once used when policemen sat on watch outside in the street it has an unusual hood designed to protect them from the wind and cold and a drawer underneath where hot coals were placed to provide warmth Scratches on the right arm were caused by their pistols rubbing up against the leather 93 Number 10 Downing Street has a lift 94 Couse also added a bow front to the small cottage formerly Mr Chicken s house incorporated into Number 10 in Walpole s time 87 See The Entrance Door c1930 As seen from inside showing the black and white marble floor and the door providing access to Number 11 95 96 Main staircase Edit When William Kent rebuilt the interior between 1732 and 1734 his craftsmen created a stone triple staircase The main section had no visible supports With a wrought iron balustrade embellished with a scroll design and mahogany handrail it rises from the garden floor to the third floor Kent s staircase is the first architectural feature visitors see as they enter Number 10 Black and white engravings and photographs of all the past prime ministers decorate the wall They are rearranged slightly to make room for a photograph of each new Prime Minister There is one exception Winston Churchill is represented in two photographs 97 98 At the bottom of the staircase are group photographs of Prime Ministers with their Cabinet ministers and representatives to imperial conferences 97 See The Main Stairway c1930 General view showing portraits of the prime ministers 99 and Detail of the Wrought Iron Balustrade 100 101 102 See also Simon Schama s Tour of Downing Street Pt4 The Staircase 103 Cabinet Room Edit Prime Minister William Gladstone in the foreground meeting with his Cabinet in 1868 104 in the Cabinet Room with its distinctive pair of double columns in the background 105 In Kent s design for the enlarged Number 10 the Cabinet Room was a simple rectangular space with enormous windows As part of the renovations begun in 1783 it was extended giving the space its modern appearance Probably not completed until 1796 106 this alteration was achieved by removing the east wall and rebuilding it several feet inside the adjoining secretaries room At the entrance a screen of two pairs of Corinthian columns was erected to carry the extra span of the ceiling supporting a moulded entablature that wraps around the room Robert Taylor the architect who executed this concept was knighted on its completion 107 The resulting small space framed by the pillars serves as an anteroom to the larger area Hendrick Danckerts painting The Palace of Whitehall shown at the beginning of this article usually hangs in the ante room 108 It also contains two large bookcases that house the prime minister s library Cabinet members traditionally donate to the collection on leaving office a tradition that began with Ramsay MacDonald in 1931 109 110 111 112 David Cameron showing John Kerry around the Cabinet Room in 2016 Although Kent intended the First Lord to use this space as his study it has rarely served that purpose it has almost always been the Cabinet Room There have been a few exceptions Stanley Baldwin used the Cabinet Room as his office A few prime ministers such as Tony Blair occasionally worked at the Cabinet Room table Painted off white with large floor to ceiling windows along one of the long walls the room is light and airy Three brass chandeliers hang from the high ceiling The Cabinet table purchased during the Gladstone era dominates the room The modern boat shaped top introduced by Harold Macmillan in the late 1950s is supported by huge original oak legs The table is surrounded by carved solid mahogany chairs that also date from the Gladstone era The prime minister s chair the only one with arms is situated midway along one side in front of the marble fireplace facing the windows when not in use it is positioned at an angle for easy access 113 The only picture in the room is a copy of a portrait of Robert Walpole by Jean Baptiste van Loo hanging over the fireplace 114 Each Cabinet member is allocated a chair based on order of seniority Blotters inscribed with their titles mark their places The First Lord has no designated office space in Number 10 each has chosen one of the adjoining rooms as his or her private office State drawing rooms Edit Number 10 has three inter linked state drawing rooms the Pillared Drawing Room the Terracotta Drawing Room and the White Drawing Room See the three state drawing rooms 115 Pillared State Drawing Room Edit Prime Minister Gordon Brown and US President Barack Obama in the Pillared Room 2009 The largest is the Pillared Room thought to have been created in 1796 by Taylor Measuring 37 feet 11 m long by 28 feet 8 5 m wide it takes its name from the twin Ionic pilasters with straight pediments at one end Today there is a portrait of Queen Elizabeth I over the fireplace during the Thatcher Ministry 1979 1990 a portrait of William Pitt by Romney was hung there A Persian carpet covers almost the entire floor A copy of a 16th century original now kept in the Victoria and Albert Museum there is an inscription woven into it that reads I have no refuge in the world other than thy threshold My head has no protection other than this porchway The work of a slave of the holy place Maqsud of Kashan in the year 926 the Islamic year corresponding to 1520 116 In the restoration conducted in the late 1980s Quinlan Terry restored the fireplace Executed in the Kentian style the small Ionic pilasters in the over mantel are miniature duplicates of the large Ionic pillars in the room The Ionic motif is also found in the door surrounds and panelling 117 Sparsely furnished with a few chairs and sofas around the walls the Pillared Room is usually used to receive guests before they go into the State Dining Room However it is sometimes used for other purposes that require a large open space International agreements have been signed in this room Tony Blair entertained the England Rugby Union team in the Pillared Room after they won the World Cup in 2003 John Logie Baird gave Ramsay MacDonald a demonstration of his invention the television in this room 118 119 See The Pillared Drawing Room c1927 120 96 121 After the Apollo 11 lunar landing in July 1969 Harold Wilson hosted a reception in the room for astronauts Neil Armstrong Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins in addition to Cambridge scientist Francis Thomas Bacon inventor of the alkaline fuel cell used to generate power for space capsules 122 Terracotta State Drawing Room Edit The Terracotta Room is the middle of the three drawing rooms It was used as the dining room when Robert Walpole was prime minister 38 The name changes according to the colour it is painted When Margaret Thatcher came to power it was the Blue Room she had it re decorated and renamed the Green Room It is now painted terracotta In the renovation of the 1980s Quinlan Terry introduced large Doric order columns to this room in the door surrounds and designed a very large Palladian overmantel for the fireplace with small double Doric columns on each side with the royal arms above Terry also added an ornate gilded ceiling to give the rooms a more stately look Carved into the plasterwork above the door leading to the Pillared Room is a tribute to Margaret Thatcher a straw carrying thatcher 123 White State Drawing Room Edit The White State Drawing room was until the 1940s used by Prime Ministers and their partners for their private use It was here that Edward Heath kept his grand piano It is often used as the backdrop for television interviews and is in regular use as a meeting room for Downing Street staff The room links through to the Terracotta Room next door In the reconstruction during the late 1980s Quinlan Terry used Corinthian columns and added ornate Baroque style central ceiling mouldings and corner mouldings of the four national flowers of the United Kingdom rose England thistle Scotland daffodil Wales and shamrock Northern Ireland 123 State Dining Room Edit When Frederick Robinson later Lord Goderich became Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1823 he decided to leave a personal legacy to the nation To this end he employed John Soane the distinguished architect who had designed the Bank of England and many other famous buildings to build a State Dining Room for Number 10 Begun in 1825 and completed in 1826 at a cost of 2 000 the result is a spacious room with oak panelling and reeded mouldings Accessed through the first floor its vaulted arched ceiling rises up through the next so that it actually occupies two floors Measuring 42 by 26 feet 12 8 by 7 9 m it is the largest room in Number 10 Soane was the guest of honour when the dining room was first used on 4 April 1826 The room is usually furnished with a table surrounded by 20 reproduction Adam style chairs originally made for the British Embassy in Rio de Janeiro For larger gatherings a horseshoe shaped table is brought in that will accommodate up to 65 guests On these occasions the table is set with the Silver Trust Silver set given to Downing Street in the 1990s See the State Dining room with the Silver Trust Silver in use for a luncheon 124 Above the fireplace overlooking the room is a massive portrait by John Shackleton of George II the king who originally gave the building to the First Lord of the Treasury in 1732 125 Celebrity chefs such as Nigella Lawson have cooked for Prime Ministers guests using the small kitchen next door Entering through the Small Dining Room Blair used this room for his monthly press conferences 126 127 128 See Simon Schama s Tour of Downing Street Pt 3 The Dining Room 129 See The State Dining Room c1930 View toward the entrance 130 131 and View from the entrance 132 and also a more modern view 133 134 Great kitchen Edit Great kitchen 1931 The great kitchen located in the basement was another part of the renovations begun in 1783 probably also under the direction of Robert Taylor 37 Seldom seen by anyone other than staff the space is two storeys high with a huge arched window and vaulted ceiling Traditionally it has always had a chopping block work table in the centre that is 14 feet 4 3 m long 3 feet 0 91 m wide and 5 inches 13 cm thick Smaller Dining or Breakfast Room Edit Above Taylor s vaulted kitchen between the Pillared Room and the State Dining room Soane created a Smaller Dining Room sometimes called the Breakfast Room that still exists To build it Soane removed the chimney from the kitchen to put a door in the room He then moved the chimney to the east side running a Y shaped split flue inside the walls up either side of one of the windows above The room therefore has a unique architectural feature over the fireplace there is a window instead of the usual chimney breast 116 With its flat unadorned ceiling simple mouldings and deep window seats the Small Dining Room is intimate and comfortable Usually furnished with a mahogany table seating only eight Prime Ministers have often used this room when dining with family or when entertaining special guests on more personal state occasions 135 See the Small Dining or Breakfast Room c1927 The double doors behind the table lead to the State Dining Room 136 137 Terrace and garden Edit Main article Garden of 10 and 11 Downing Street Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin seated centre with his legs crossed poses in the garden of Number Ten with representatives to the 1923 Imperial Conference The terrace and garden were constructed in 1736 shortly after Walpole moved into Number 10 The terrace extending across the back provides a full view of St James s Park The garden is dominated by a half acre 0 2 ha open lawn which wraps around Numbers 10 and 11 in an L shape No longer fitted with variety Walle fruit and diverse fruit trees as it was in the 17th century there is now a centrally located flower bed around a holly tree surrounded by seats Tubs of flowers line the steps from the terrace around the walls are rose beds with flowering and evergreen shrubs 125 138 See North elevation of Number 10 with steps leading to the garden 139 140 The terrace and garden have provided a casual setting for many gatherings of First Lords with foreign dignitaries Cabinet ministers guests and staff Prime Minister Tony Blair for example hosted a farewell reception in 2007 for his staff on the terrace John Major announced his 1997 resignation as leader of the Conservative Party in the garden Churchill called his secretaries the garden girls because their offices overlook the garden 141 It was also the location of the first press conference announcing the Coalition Government between David Cameron s Conservatives and Nick Clegg s Liberal Democrats 142 Furnishings Edit Number 10 is filled with fine paintings sculptures busts and furniture Only a few are permanent features Most are on loan About half belong to the Government Art Collection The remainder are on loan from private collectors and from public galleries such as the National Portrait Gallery the Tate Gallery the Victoria and Albert Museum and the National Gallery 143 See works from the Government Art Collection currently on display at Number 10 144 About a dozen paintings are changed annually More extensive changes occur when a new Prime Minister takes office and redecorates 145 These redecorations may reflect both individual taste as well as make a political statement Edward Heath borrowed French paintings from the National Gallery and was loaned two Renoirs from a private collector When Margaret Thatcher arrived in 1979 she insisted that the artwork had to be British and that it celebrate British achievers As a former chemist she took pleasure in devoting the Small Dining Room to a collection of portraits of British scientists such as Joseph Priestley and Humphry Davy During the 1990s John Major converted the first floor anteroom into a small gallery of modern art mostly British He also introduced several paintings by John Constable and J M W Turner Britain s two best known 19th century artists and cricketing paintings by Archibald Stuart Wortley including a portrait of one of England s most celebrated batsmen W G Grace 146 In addition to outstanding artwork Number 10 contains many exceptional pieces of furniture either owned by the house or on loan One of the most striking and unusual is the already mentioned Chippendale hooded guard s chair that sits in a corner of the entrance hall To its left is a long case clock by Benson of Whitehaven A similar clock by Samuel Whichcote of London stands in the Cabinet anteroom The White State Drawing Room contains examples of Adam furniture The Green State Drawing Room contains mostly Chippendale furniture including a card table that belonged to Clive of India and a mahogany desk that is thought to have belonged to William Pitt the Younger and used by him during the Napoleonic Wars In addition to the large carpet previously described the Pillared State Drawing Room also contains a marble topped table by Kent The State Dining Room contains a mahogany sideboard by Adam 147 note 2 Until the late 19th century Prime Ministers were required to furnish Number 10 at their own expense with furniture tableware china linens curtains and decorations This arrangement began to change in 1877 when Benjamin Disraeli took up residency He insisted that the Treasury should bear the cost of furnishings at least in the public areas The Treasury agreed and a complex accounting procedure was developed whereby the outgoing prime minister was required to pay for wear and tear on furnishings that had been purchased by the Treasury This system was used until November 1897 when the Treasury assumed responsibility for purchasing and maintaining almost all of the furnishings in both the public and private areas except decorating the walls with art work In 1924 when Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald took office he did not own nor have the means to buy an extensive art collection He had the Government Art Collection loan pieces The arrangement became the standard practice 148 250th anniversary 1985 Edit Queen Elizabeth II in Downing Street in 1985 to mark the 250th anniversary of Robert Walpole s occupancy of No 10 In 1985 Number 10 was 250 years old To celebrate Thatcher hosted a grand dinner in the State Dining Room for her living predecessors Harold Macmillan Alec Douglas Home Harold Wilson Edward Heath and James Callaghan 149 Also in attendance were Elizabeth II and representatives of the families of every 20th century Prime Minister since H H Asquith including Lady Olwen Carey Evans daughter of David Lloyd George Lady Leonora Howard daughter of Stanley Baldwin and Clarissa Avon widow of Anthony Eden and niece of Winston Churchill 150 That same year the Leisure Circle published Christopher Jones book No 10 Downing Street The Story of a House In the foreword Thatcher described her feelings for Number 10 How much I wish that the public could share with me the feeling of Britain s historic greatness which pervades every nook and cranny of this complicated and meandering old building All Prime Ministers are intensely aware that as tenants and stewards of No 10 Downing Street they have in their charge one of the most precious jewels in the nation s heritage 4 Security after the 1991 bombing EditMain article Downing Street mortar attack Gates at the main entrance of Downing Street For most of its history Number 10 was accessible to the public Early security consisted of two police officers one stood guard outside the door the other was stationed inside to open it Since the door had no keyhole the inside officer depended upon the lone outside officer During Thatcher s premiership terrorist threats led to the implementation of a second level of security Guarded gates were added at both ends of the street Visitors could then be screened before approaching the door Despite the added measure on 7 February 1991 the Provisional IRA used a van they parked in Whitehall to launch a mortar shell at Number 10 It exploded in the back garden while Prime Minister John Major was holding a Cabinet meeting Major moved to Admiralty House while repairs were being completed This led to the addition of guardhouses at the street ends as well as other less visible measures Each guardhouse is staffed by several armed police officers The Metropolitan Police Service s Diplomatic Protection Group DPG provides overall protection and acts on intelligence from MI5 Office of the Prime Minister EditThe Prime Minister s Office for which the terms Downing Street and Number 10 are metonymous lies within the 10 Downing Street building and is part of the Cabinet Office 151 It is staffed by a mix of career civil servants and special advisers The highest ranking civil servant position is the principal private secretary to the prime minister currently update Nick Catsaras 152 From 2010 to 2012 and from May to September 2020 there was a Downing Street Permanent Secretary held by Jeremy Heywood and Simon Case respectively which ranked above the principal private Secretary to the prime minister From 1997 to 2019 and since 2020 the most senior special adviser post is the Downing Street chief of staff but this job title was out of use from July 2019 to November 2020 when the role was split into two positions with Dominic Cummings 153 154 155 who served as the chief adviser to the prime minister and Edward Lister 156 157 who served as the chief strategic adviser to the prime minister Lister served as acting chief of staff but was replaced by Dan Rosenfield who officially assumed the role in January 2021 158 Though Number 10 is formally part of the Cabinet Office it reports directly to the Cabinet Secretary who is currently update Simon Case In her report about parties on Government premises during the COVID pandemic Sue Gray concluded that the size of the Downing Street operation had increased without the structures to support them and too much responsibility and expectation is placed on the senior official whose principal function is support of the Prime Minister She said this needed to be addressed as a priority and Boris Johnson agreed to the Office of the Prime Minister becoming a Government department 159 Several changes in staffing took place early in February 2022 The role of Downing Street Permanent Secretary was revived with Samantha Jones holding the position on an interim basis 160 Current positions within the Office of the Prime Minister Edit List of current civil service and senior special adviser positions serving Prime Minister Rishi Sunak Position Current holder Term startedDowning Street Chief of Staff Liam Booth Smith 25 October 2022Downing Street Deputy Chief of Staff Will Tanner 4 November 2022Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister Elizabeth Perelman 25 October 2022Downing Street Permanent Secretary and Chief Operating Officer Samantha Jones 3 February 2022Downing Street Director of Communications Amber de Botton 29 October 2022Downing Street Press Secretary Nerissa Chesterfield 25 October 2022Political Secretary to the Prime Minister James ForsythPrime Minister s Official SpokespersonDowning Street Director of Policy Eleanor Shawcross Wolfson 25 October 2022Prime Minister s Chief Business AdviserDowning Street Director of Legislative AffairsDowning Street Head of OperationsParliamentary Private Secretary to the Prime Minister Craig Williams MP 26 October 2022History Edit Pre 2001 organisation The No 10 Private Office government coordination diary management and correspondence The No 10 Press Office press and public relations The press office has grown in significance as media attention on the PM has intensified Thatcher s press secretary Bernard Ingham was one of her most important advisors Alastair Campbell s influence as Blair s press secretary was even greater The No 10 Policy Unit policy review and advice The No 10 Political Office party political liaison and constituency affairs The office was reorganised in 2001 into three directorates Policy and government Took over the functions of the private office and policy unit Prepares advice for the PM and coordinates development and implementation of policy across departments Communication and strategy Press office responsible for relations with the media Direct communications unit Research and information unit provides factual information to No 10 Strategy unit Government and political relations Handles party and constituency affairsChanges were intended to strengthen the PM s office However some commentators have suggested that Blair s reforms have created something similar to a Prime Minister s Department a The reorganisation brought about the fusion of the old Prime Minister s Office and other Cabinet Office teams with a number of units including the Prime Minister s Strategy Unit now reporting directly into the Prime Minister s Office Since 2005 Number 10 s Direct Communication Unit has not used its staff s real names on signed correspondence to MPs and members of the public this is for security reasons 162 However the Institute for Government has written that the Cabinet Office of which the Prime Minister s Office is a component is a long way from becoming a fully fledged premier s department primarily based on the fact that the prime minister largely lacks the direct policy responsibilities either in statute or by convention under the Royal Prerogative possessed by secretaries of state who have substantial budgets voted to them by Parliament 163 See also Edit10 Downing Street Guard Chairs Chequers the prime minister s official country residence Larry a cat employed as the Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office at 10 Downing Street List of residents of 10 Downing Street Official residenceNotes EditFootnotes Edit At the end of the 19th century Lord Salisbury the last Prime Minister not to concurrently hold the post of First Lord of the Treasury lived in his town house on Arlington Street During Salisbury s last ministry from 1895 to 1902 the First Lord was his nephew and successor Arthur Balfour the Leader of the House of Commons it was thus Balfour who resided in Number 10 in this time 48 Until the late 19th century Prime Ministers were required to furnish Number 10 at their own expense with furniture tableware china linens curtains and decorations This arrangement began to change in 1877 when Benjamin Disraeli took up residency He insisted that the Treasury should bear the cost of furnishings at least in the public areas The Treasury agreed and a complex accounting procedure was developed whereby the outgoing Prime Minister was required to pay for wear and tear on furnishings that had been purchased by the Treasury This system was used until November 1897 when the Treasury assumed responsibility for purchasing and maintaining almost all of the furnishings in both the public and private areas except decorating the walls with art work In 1924 when Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald took office he did not own nor have the means to buy an extensive art collection He had the Government Art Collection loan pieces The arrangement became the standard practice 164 The Times political correspondent Peter Riddell discussed the consequences of the reform in an article entitled New look behind the revolving doors of power in which he observed Mr Blair has not formally set up a Prime Minister s Department in order to avoid charges of presidentialism but he has created one in all but name in 10 Downing Street 161 Citations Edit Historic England 10 Downing Street 1210759 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 6 August 2017 First Lord of the Treasury GOV UK www gov uk Retrieved 12 April 2021 10 Surprising facts about Number 10 Downing Street BBC 2020 a b Jones in letter from Margaret Thatcher used as a preface to the book See Cabinet Office letter dated 9 October 2018 in response to Freedom of Information request of 11 September 2018 Bolitho pp 16 21 Jones pp 24 32 Feely pp 17 31 a b Minney p 28 Feely pp 28 31 Jones p 41 Bolitho p 20 a b Minney p 34 Jones p 32 Feeley p 32 Jones see back cover picture credited to Robert Hill BBC Minney p 23 Jones pp 16 18 Minney pp 23 24 Minney p 24 Minney pp 24 25 Jones pp 20 21 a b Jones p 21 fig50 British History Online Retrieved 15 March 2013 a b c British History Online From No 10 Downing Street Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 113 141 Date accessed 22 July 2008 The diarist Pepys recorded a high tide when Whitehall was under water and it is known that buildings in the area require deep foundations to avoid settling Minney p 25 Jones p 23 fig51 British History Online Retrieved 15 March 2013 Jones Nigel R 2005 Architecture of England Scotland and Wales Greenwood Publishing Group p 187 ISBN 978 0 313 31850 4 Minney p 33 No 10 Downing Street British History Online www british history ac uk Retrieved 17 June 2021 See letter dated Downing Street 30 June 1742 from Horace Walpole to Horace Mann I am writing to you in one of the charming rooms towards the Park it is I am willing to enjoy this sweet corner while I may for we are soon to quit it Mrs Sandys came yesterday to give us warning Lord Wilmington has lent it to them Sir Robert might have had it for his own at first but would only take it as First Lord of the Treasury He goes into a small house of his own in Arlington Street opposite to where we formerly lived Horace Walpole s Letters ed Cunningham 1857 I p 246 British History Online From No 10 Downing Street Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 113 141 Date accessed 21 July 2008 Feely p 34 Bolitho p 25 Minney p 50 a b Seldon p 16 a b Jones p 46 Miney p 47 Minney pp 46 47 Blick Andrew 2010 Premiership the development nature and power of the British Prime Minister G W Jones Exeter Imprint Academic pp 134 135 and 144 145 ISBN 978 1 84540 647 9 OCLC 742600769 a b Jones p 51 Minney p 29 Jones p 52 Henry Pelham for example had his own spacious home and had no need for Number 10 In a piece of blatant political corruption he allowed his son in law Henry Clinton Earl of Lincoln to live there from 1745 to 1753 even though Clinton was not involved in politics Minney pp 173 and 179 Lord Liverpool assigned it to his two Chancellors of the Exchequer Nicholas Vansittart 1812 1823 and Frederick Robinson 1823 1827 British History Online Letter B M Addl MS 38292 f 11 from Lord Liverpool to Charles Ellis dated 22 January 1823 is of interest When you spoke to me some time ago upon the subject of the House in Downing Street I was under the impression as you were yourself that the house was the King s amp that he might dispose of it in any manner he might think proper Upon Inquiry however it appeared that the House was attached to the Treasury as a Part of the Office That the First Lord of the Treasury occupies it if he thinks proper If he declines it the Chancellor of the Exchequer occupies it not as Chancellor of the Exchequer but as second in the Commission of the Treasury That if he declined it it would go to the next in the Commission or it might possibly be disposed of by the Board to any Member or Officer of the Treasury but could not amp never has been detached from it You are mistaken in supposing that Mr Vansittart is the only Chancellor of the Exchequer who without being first Lord of the Treasury occupied it Lord North certainly occupied it during the two years he was Chancellor of the Exchequer only I believe Mr Charles Townshend occupied it but I know Mr Dowdeswell did amp it is remarkable that he is I believe the only instance of a Chancellor of the Exchequer upon Record who was not in the Cabinet The House stands in fact upon the same footing as the Houses of the Admiralty which could not be assigned to any Person not belonging to that office Bolitho p 116 A few peers lived in Number 10 out of necessity The Duke of Wellington for example grudgingly lived there for eighteen months between 1828 and 1830 because his own home Apsley House was undergoing extensive renovations He left as soon as it was finished Minney p 322 Minney pp 83 84 a b Minney p 117 fig52 british history ac uk a b Jones p 71 Jones p 72 figure0748 111 british history ac uk British History Online From Plate 111 No 10 Downing Street plan of alterations in 1781 Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 111 Date accessed 22 July 2008 Minney pp 182 183 Seldon p 23 Jones p 96 figure0748 113 british history ac uk figure0748 112 british history ac uk Holmes Richard T 2010 Churchill s Bunker The Cabinet War Rooms and the Culture of Secrecy in Wartime London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 16046 8 Holmes pp 106 107 Minney p 409 Jones p 156 Downing St We d really rather not This Is London 19 May 2010 Retrieved 14 May 2017 Minney p 393 Minney p 402 Minney pp 333 334 a b Minney p 428 Jones pp 153 154 a b Seldon p 32 Minney pp 429 430 Sir Edgar Beck The Telegraph London 9 August 2000 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 5 June 2012 The Times Downing Street Reconstruction to Cost 1 250 000 December 1959 Jones p 154 a b Seldon p 33 Jones pp 154 155 Minney pp 429 433 Seldon p 34 a b Mosley James Number Ten Typefoundry blog Retrieved 14 July 2015 Seldon p 35 Seldon p 36 Seldon p 37 Electoral Commission to investigate Boris Johnson s Downing Street flat renovations BBC News 28 April 2021 Retrieved 29 April 2021 Trump and May to meet for talks in Davos after special relationship tested Archived from the original on 20 January 2018 Retrieved 20 January 2018 10 Downing Street The World s Most Famous Front Door IronmongeryDirect March 2015 a b Minney p 84 figure0748 118 a british history ac uk British History Online From Plate 118 No 10 Downing Street main doorway and kitchen Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 118 Date accessed 20 July 2008 Greene Bob 2 October 1988 Who has the key to front door of No 10 Downing Street Retrieved 21 April 2013 Virtual Tour of Number 10 10 Downing Street Molly Oldfield John Mitchinson 29 May 2012 QI Quite interesting facts about 10 Downing Street The Telegraph London Retrieved 21 April 2013 Inside Number Ten A guided tour The Independent 28 June 2007 Archived from the original on 8 April 2011 Retrieved 24 October 2022 Google Maps Google Maps figure0748 126 a british history ac uk a b British History Online From Plate 126 No 10 Downing Street entrance hall and drawing room Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 126 Date accessed 22 July 2008 a b Seldon p 49 Feely p 13 figure0748 124 a british history ac uk figure0748 125 british history ac uk British History Online From Plate 124 No 10 Downing Street details Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 124 Date accessed 20 July 2008 British History Online From Plate 125 No 10 Downing Street detail of iron balustrading to main staircase Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 125 Date accessed 20 July 2008 YouTube Simon Schama s Tour of Downing Street Pt4 The Staircase YouTube Archived from the original on 9 July 2009 Retrieved 1 June 2009 Dickinson Lowes Cato Gladstone s Cabinet of 1868 NPG 5116 National Portrait Gallery London Retrieved 2 February 2010 Shannon Richard 1984 Gladstone 1809 1865 p 342 p 580 ISBN 978 0 8078 1591 5 Retrieved 2 February 2010 Seldon 1999 p 18 Minney 1963 pp 117 118 Seldon 1999 p 43 Seldon 1999 p 184 Schama Simon 15 June 2007 Simon Schama s Tour of Downing Street Pt2 The Cabinet Room 10 Downing Street Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 via YouTube The Modern Cabinet Room Two photographs taken by Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin c 1927 View looking toward the screen and View from the Screen Cox Montagu H Topham Forrest G eds 1931 Plate 121 No 10 Downing Street Cabinet Room Survey of London London London County Council 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 121 Retrieved 20 July 2008 via British History Online Seldon 1999 pp 44 45 Jones 1985 p 161 The three state drawing rooms as reconstructed by Quinlan Terry 1988 1990 Archived from the original on 16 March 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2013 a b Jones 1985 p 179 Seldon 1999 p 36 Jones 1985 p 129 Seldon 1999 p 55 Cox Montagu H Topham Forrest G eds 1931 Plate 126 No 10 Downing Street entrance hall and drawing room Survey of London London London County Council 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 126 Retrieved 18 February 2020 via British History Online Seldon 1999 p 25 Apollo 11 mission 50 years on The Cambridge scientist who helped put man on the moon Cambridge Independent Retrieved 21 July 2022 a b Seldon 1999 pp 35 37 Welcome to The Silver Trust Archived from the original on 17 November 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2009 a b Jones p 180 Seldon p 59 Minney p 182 Jones p 89 and see also Soane s sketches of several versions of the State Dining Room on p 84 YouTube Simon Schama s Tour of Downing Street Pt3 The Dining Room YouTube Downing Street 11 June 2007 Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 Retrieved 11 May 2010 figure0748 130 british history ac uk British History Online From Plate 130 No 10 Downing Street Official Dining Room Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 130 Date accessed 21 July 2008 figure0748 131 british history ac uk The State Dining Room at no 10 Archived from the original on 18 April 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2013 British History Online From Plate 131 No 10 Downing Street Official Dining Room Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 131 Date accessed 21 July 2008 Seldon p 20 figure0748 129 a british history ac uk British History Online From Plate 129 No 10 Downing Street breakfast room and smaller drawing room Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 129 Date accessed 9 August 2008 Seldon p 46 figure0748 117 a british history ac uk British History Online From Plate 117 No 10 Downing Street elevation and general view Survey of London volume 14 St Margaret Westminster part III Whitehall II 1931 pp 117 Date accessed 21 July 2008 Jones p 138 Welcome to the Dave and Nick Show BBC News 12 May 2010 Seldon p 172 Government Art Collection Archived 30 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine gac culture gov uk Sheldon p 174 Seldon pp 172 173 Seldon pp 185 188 Minney pp 285 286 Time Magazine People by Ellie McGrath 16 December 1985 Seldon p 90 Cabinet Office structure Cabinet Office HM Government 10 June 2010 Archived from the original on 1 July 2010 Retrieved 6 July 2010 Martin Reynolds UK Government Profile Gov uk Retrieved 14 November 2020 Who is Dominic Cummings BBC News 13 February 2020 Retrieved 1 May 2020 PM s aide Cummings calls for civil service changes BBC News 3 January 2020 Retrieved 1 May 2020 Kuenssberg Laura 24 July 2019 One big appointment coming today Dominic Cummings expected to be senior advisor to the new PM Vote Leave chief moving into govt huge brain and experienced in govt and will be applauded by Brexiteers highly controversial too bbclaurak Retrieved 1 May 2020 Payne Sebastian Parker George 17 January 2020 Johnson adviser s housing role highlights lack of transparency Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 31 May 2020 Eddie Lister Boris Johnson s chief strategic adviser Homes England 13 August 2019 Sir Edward Lister resigns as Homes England Chair GOV UK Press release UK Government Retrieved 20 September 2019 Boris Johnson appoints new chief of staff after Cummings exit BBC News 26 November 2020 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Johnson promises No 10 shake up after Gray finds failures BBC News 31 January 2022 Retrieved 9 February 2022 No10 team bolstered to deliver the people s priorities gov uk 9 February 2022 Retrieved 20 May 2022 Riddell Peter 13 June 2001 New look behind the revolving doors of power The Times p 12 Hawkins Ross 11 May 2011 No 10 admits using false names on letters to the public BBC News Blick Andrew Jones George The power of the Prime Minister health equity pitt edu Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 21 March 2015 Minney p 285 286References EditBolitho Hector 1957 No 10 Downing Street 1660 1900 Hutchinson OCLC 1712032 Blick Andrew and Jones George 2010 Premiership The Development Nature and Power of the Office of the British Prime Minister Imprint Academic ISBN 9781845401689 Feely Terence 1982 No 10 The Private Lives of Six Prime Ministers Sidgwick and Jackson ISBN 978 0 283 98893 6 Holmes Richard 2009 Churchill s Bunker The Secret Headquarters at the Heart of Britain s Victory Profile Books OCLC 449854872 Jones Christopher 1985 No 10 Downing Street The Story of a House The Leisure Circle ISBN 978 0 563 20441 1 Minney R J 1963 No 10 Downing Street A House in History Boston Little Brown and Company OCLC 815822725 Seldon Anthony 1999 No 10 Downing Street The Illustrated History London HarperCollins Illustrated ISBN 978 0 00 414073 5 Smith Goldwin 1990 A Constitutional and Legal History of England New York Dorset Press OCLC 498777 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 10 Downing Street Official website Prime Ministers in History History of the building Virtual Tour of 10 Downing Street Photos from the Prime Minister s Office 10 Downing Street section from the Survey of London Plans of 10 11 and 12 Downing Street published 1931 ground first second and third floors 10 Downing Street on Facebook Virtual Tour Virtual tour of seven Downing Street rooms and the garden Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 10 Downing Street amp oldid 1132786056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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