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Wikipedia

Paddington

Paddington is an area in the City of Westminster, in central London, England.[1] A medieval parish then a metropolitan borough, it was integrated with Westminster and Greater London in 1965. Paddington station, designed by the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel opened in 1847. It is also the site of St Mary's Hospital and the former Paddington Green Police Station.

Paddington
Paddington
Location within Greater London
OS grid referenceTQ267814
London borough
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLondon
Postcode districtW2, W9
Dialling code020
PoliceMetropolitan
FireLondon
AmbulanceLondon
UK Parliament
London Assembly
List of places
UK
England
London
51°31′02″N 0°10′23″W / 51.5172°N 0.1730°W / 51.5172; -0.1730

Paddington Waterside aims to regenerate former railway and canal land. Districts within Paddington are Maida Vale, Westbourne and Bayswater including Lancaster Gate.

History

 
A map showing the wards of Paddington Metropolitan Borough as they appeared in 1916.

The earliest extant references to Padington (or "Padintun", as in the Saxon Chartularies, 959[2]), historically a part of Middlesex, appear in documentation of purported tenth-century land grants to the monks of Westminster by Edgar the Peaceful as confirmed by Archbishop Dunstan. However, the documents' provenance is much later and likely to have been forged after the 1066 Norman conquest. There is no mention of the place (or Westbourne or Knightsbridge) in the Domesday Book of 1086.[3]

It has been reasonably speculated that a Saxon settlement led by the followers of Padda, an Anglo-Saxon chieftain, was located around the intersection of the northern and western Roman roads, corresponding with the Edgware Road (Watling Street) and the Harrow and Uxbridge Roads.[4][5] From the tenth century, Paddington was owned by Westminster Abbey which was later confirmed by the Plantagenet kings in a charter from 1222. This charter mentions a chapel and a farm situated in the area.[5] While a 12th-century document cited by the cleric Isaac Maddox (1697–1759) establishes that part of the land was held by brothers "Richard and William de Padinton".[6] They and their descendants carried out activities in Paddington; these were known by records dating from 1168 to 1485. They were the earliest known tenant farmers of the land.[5]

During King Henry VIII's dissolution, the property of Paddington was seized by the crown. However, King Edward VI granted the land to the Bishop of London in 1550. Successive bishops would later lease farmlands to tenants and city merchants. One such, in the 1540s was Thomas North who translated Plutarch's Parallel Lives into English in 1579. Shakespeare would later use this work and was said to have performed in taverns along Edgware Road.[5]

In the later Elizabethan and early Stuart era, the rectory, manor and associated estate houses were occupied by the Small (or Smale) family. Nicholas Small was a clothworker who was sufficiently well connected to have Holbein paint a portrait of his wife, Jane Small. Nicholas died in 1565 and his wife married again, to Nicholas Parkinson of Paddington who became master of the Clothworkers' Company. Jane Small continued to live in Paddington after her second husband's death, and her manor house was big enough to have been let to Sir John Popham, the attorney general, in the 1580s. They let the building that became in this time Blowers Inn.[7]

Early Modern period

As the regional population grew in the 17th century, Paddington's ancient Hundred of Ossulstone was split into divisions; Holborn Division replaced the hundred for most administrative purposes.[8] A church, the predecessor of St Mary was built in Paddington in 1679.[9]

 
St Mary on Paddington, a Georgian church commissioned in 1788

In 1740, John Frederick leased the estate in Paddington and it is from his granddaughters and their families that many of Paddington's street names are derived.[5] The New Road was built in 1756–7 to link the villages of Paddington and Islington.[10]: 260  By 1773, a contemporary historian felt and wrote that "London may now be said to include two cities (London and Westminster), one borough (Southwark) and forty six antient [ancient] villages [among which]... Paddington and [adjoining] Marybone (Marylebone)."[9] During the 18th century, several French Huguenots called Paddington village home. These included jewellers, nobility and skilled craftsmen; and men such as Claudius Amyand (surgeon to King George II). The French nobility built magnificent gardens that lasted up until the 19th century.[5]

Roman roads formed the parish's northeastern and southern boundaries from Marble Arch: Watling Street (later Edgware Road) and; (the) Uxbridge road, known by the 1860s in this neighbourhood as Bayswater Road. They were toll roads in much of the 18th century, before and after the dismantling of the permanent Tyburn gallows "tree" at their junction in 1759 a junction now known as Marble Arch.[11]: p.174  The Tyburn gallows might have been a reason why expansion and urban development (from London) slowed in Paddington; as public execution was taking place there up until 1783.[5]

 
Paddington station first opened in 1838

Only in 1801 did major construction to Paddington occur. This happened when the bishops leased land to the Grand Junction Canal, where a direct trade link could now take place between London and the Midlands, bringing more employment to the area. The canal would remain dominant until Regent's Canal was built in 1820. Construction and building projects would take place from east to west and south to north throughout the 19th century; increasing its population in a rapid pace, overtaking the village scene of Paddington. This population increase would go from 1,881 to 46,305 between 1801 and 1851 respectively; with 10,000 new inhabitants added every decade thereafter.[5]

Paddington station first opened in 1838, with the first underground line in 1863 (Metropolitan).[5] Paddington was one of the few districts in London that had a migrant majority population by 1881.[10]: 416  With a thriving Greek and Jewish community present in the mid-19th century. During the period, several Victorian churches were demolished owing to structural decay. Victorian housing developed into slums, giving the area an unsavoury reputation.

However, in the 1930s massive rebuilding and improvements projects were made. However, even as late as the 1950s Paddington was a byword for overcrowding, poverty and vice. Between the 1960s and 1980s, the area would see vast improvements and redevelopments in city planning.[5]

Tyburnia

The southeast section of Tyburnia used to be a shanty-town in the 1790s before the Canal was built and brought much needed employment to its inhabitants. The area was built up during the course of the Napoleonic Wars.[5]

In the 19th century the part of the parish most sandwiched between Edgware Road and Westbourne Terrace, Gloucester Terrace and Craven Hill, bounded to the south by Bayswater Road, was known as Tyburnia. The district formed the centrepiece of an 1824 masterplan by Samuel Pepys Cockerell to redevelop the Tyburn Estate (historic lands of the Bishop of London) into a residential area to rival Belgravia.[12]

The area was laid out in the mid-1800s when grand squares and cream-stuccoed terraces started to fill the acres between Paddington station and Hyde Park; however, the plans were never realised in full. Despite this, Thackeray described the residential district of Tyburnia as "the elegant, the prosperous, the polite Tyburnia, the most respectable district of the habitable globe."[13]

Etymology

Derivation of the name is uncertain. Speculative explanations include Padre-ing-tun (explained as "father's meadow village"), Pad-ing-tun ("pack-horse meadow village"),[14] and Pæding-tun ("village of the race of Pæd")[15] the last being the cited suggestion of the Victorian Anglo-Saxon scholar John Mitchell Kemble.

There is another Paddington in Surrey, recorded in the Domesday Book as "Padendene"[16] and later as "Paddingdon", perhaps to be derived from Old English dene, denu "valley", whereas Paddington in Middlesex is commonly traced back to Old English tūn "farm, homestead, town". Both place names share the same first part, a personal name rendered as Pad(d)a, of uncertain origin, giving "Padda's valley" for the place in Surrey and "homestead of Padda's people" for the place in Middlesex.[2] That both place names would refer to the same individual or ancient family,[17] is pure speculation. A lord named Padda is named in the Domesday Book, associated with Brampton, Suffolk.[18]

Colloquial expressions

An 18th-century dictionary gives "Paddington Fair Day. An execution day, Tyburn being in the parish or neighbourhood of Paddington. To dance the Paddington frisk ; to be hanged."[19] Public executions were abolished in England in 1868.[20]

Geography

The Paddington district is centred around Paddington railway station. The conventional recognised boundary of the district is much smaller than the longstanding pre-mid-19th century parish. That parish was virtually equal to the borough abolished in 1965. It is divided from a northern offshoot Maida Vale by the Regent's Canal; its overlap is the artisan and touristic neighbourhood of Little Venice. In the east of the district around Paddington Green it remains divided from Marylebone by Edgware Road (as commonly heard in spoken form, the Edgware Road). In the south west it is bounded by its south and western offshoot Bayswater. A final offshoot, Westbourne, rises to the north west.

Governance

 
An 1834 map of the Parliamentary Borough of St Marylebone, showing Paddington in (green) and St Pancras (yellow). These Parliamentary Boroughs, like the subsequent Metropolitan Boroughs used the ancient parish boundaries.
 

Paddington was part of the Metropolitan Borough of Paddington, the headquarters of which was at Paddington Town Hall, until 1965 when the area became part of the enlarged City of Westminster.[21]

Landmarks

Browning's Pool

A lagoon created in the 1810s at the convergence of the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal, the Regent's Canal and the Paddington Basin. It is an important focal point of the Little Venice area. It is reputedly named after Robert Browning, the poet. More recently known as the "Little Venice Lagoon" it contains a small islet known as Browning's Island. Although Browning was thought to have coined the name "Little Venice" for this spot there are strong arguments Lord Byron was responsible.[22]

London Paddington Station

Paddington station is the iconic landmark associated with the area. In the station are statues of its designer, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, and the children's fiction character Paddington Bear.

Paddington Basin

The terminus of the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal was originally known as the Paddington Basin and all the land to the south was developed into housing and commercial property and titled The Grand Junction Estate. The majority of the housing was bounded by Praed Street, Sussex Gardens, Edgware Road and Norfolk Place. Land and buildings not used for the canal undertaking remained after 1929 with the renamed Grand Junction Company, which functioned as a property company. While retaining its own name, it was taken over in 1972 by the Amalgamated Investment and Property Company, which went into liquidation in 1976. Prior to the liquidation the Welbeck Estate Securities Group acquired the entire estate comprising 525 houses 15 shops and the Royal Exchange public House in Sale Place.

The surrounding area is now known as Merchant Square. A former transshipment facility, the surrounds of the canal basin named Merchant Square have been redeveloped to provide 2,000,000 sq ft (190,000 m2) of offices, homes, shops and leisure facilities.[23] The redeveloped basin has some innovative features including Heatherwicks Rolling Bridge, the Merchant Square Fan Bridge and the Floating Pocket Park.[24]

Paddington Central

Situated to the north of the railway as it enters Paddington station, and to the south of the Westway flyover and with the canal to the east the former railway goods yard has been developed into a modern complex with wellbeing, leisure, retail and leisure facilities.[25] The public area from the canal to Sheldon Square with the amphitheatre hosts leisure facilities and special events.[26]

Paddington Green

A green space and conservation area in the east of the Paddington district immediately to the north of the Westway and west of Edgware Road. It includes St Mary on Paddington Green Church. The Paddington Green campus of the City of Westminster College is adjacent to the Green. Paddington Green Police Station is immediately to the north west of the intersection of Westway and Edgware Road.

Transport

Rail

Paddington station is on the London Underground and National Rail networks. It is in London fare zone 1.[27]

National Rail

Great Western Railway services from Paddington run towards Slough, Maidenhead and Reading, with intercity services continuing towards destinations in South West England and South Wales, including Oxford, Worcester, Bristol, Cardiff, Exeter, Plymouth and Penzance.[28]

The Elizabeth line, operated by Transport for London (TfL), runs a stopping service from Paddington to Reading, either as part of through-running services from the central and eastern parts of the Elizabeth line or starting from Paddington. These trains mostly depart from the deep-level Elizabeth line platforms underneath the western side of the mainline station. These deep-level Elizabeth line tracks emerge above ground adjacent to the mainline tracks just west of Royal Oak tube station and join them at that point, thereafter sharing the relief line tracks with some Great Western Railway stopping services as far as the Elizabeth line terminus at Reading. Elizabeth line services link the Paddington area both to destinations in west London and Berkshire and to the centre and eastern side of London.

Trains to Heathrow Airport also depart from Paddington, operated both by the Elizabeth line (stopping services via Ealing Broadway) and the Heathrow Express (no intermediate stops).[27][28]

London Underground

There are two London Underground (tube) stations in the Paddington station complex.

The Bakerloo, Circle and District lines call at the station on Praed Street (which, from the main concourse, is opposite platform 3). This links Paddington directly to destinations across Central and West London, including Baker Street, Earl's Court, Oxford Circus, South Kensington, Victoria, Waterloo, Westminster and Wimbledon.[27]

The Circle and Hammersmith & City lines call at the station near the Paddington Basin (to the north of platform 12). Trains from this station link the area directly to Hammersmith via Shepherd's Bush to the west. Eastbound trains pass through Baker Street, King's Cross St Pancras, Liverpool Street in the City, Whitechapel and Barking.[27]

Lancaster Gate tube station is also in the area, served by Central line trains.[27]

Heritage

Paddington station was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. The permanent building opened in 1854.

Paddington Bear was also named after the station; in Michael Bond's 1958 book A Bear Called Paddington, Paddington is found at the station by the Brown family. He is lost, having just arrived in London from "darkest Peru."

Buses

London Buses 7, 23, 27, 36, 46, 205 and 332, and night buses N7 and N205 serve Paddington station. Buses 23, 27 and 36 operate 24 hours, daily.[29]

Routes 94 and 148 serve Lancaster Gate station to the south of Paddington. Both routes operate 24 hours, daily, supplemented by route N207 at nights.[30]

Road

Several key routes pass through or around the Paddington area, including:

Cycling

Cycling infrastructure is provided in Paddington by Transport for London (TfL) and the Canal & River Trust.

Several cycle routes pass through the area, including:

Sustrans also propose that National Cycle Route 6 (NCR 6) will begin at Paddington and run northwest along the Grand Union Canal towpath. The route, when complete, will run signposted and unbroken to Keswick, Cumbria. Within the M25, the route will pass through Hayes, Uxbridge and Watford.[34]

Santander Cycles, a London-wide bike sharing system, operates in Paddington, with several docking stations in the area.[35]

Canal

 
The Rolling Bridge at Paddington, designed by Thomas Heatherwick.

The Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal runs from Paddington to Hayes, via Westbourne Park and Willesden. Beyond Hayes, onward destinations include Slough, the Colne Valley, and Aylesbury. The Paddington Basin is in the area, as is Little Venice. A towpath runs unbroken from Paddington to Hayes.[36]

The Rolling Bridge at the Paddington Basin was designed by Thomas Heatherwick, who wanted to create a bridge that, instead of breaking apart to let boats through, would "get out of the way" instead. Heatherwick's website cites the "fluid, coiling tails of the animatronic dinosaurs of Jurassic Park" as the initial influence behind the Bridge.[37]

The Regent's Canal begins at Little Venice, heading east towards Maida Vale, Regent's Park, Camden Town, King's Cross, Old Street and Mile End en route to Limehouse. A towpath runs along the canal from Paddington to Limehouse, broken only by the Maida Hill and Islington tunnels.[38]

Development

Commercial traffic on the Grand Junction Canal (which became the Grand Union Canal in 1929) dwindled because of railway competition in the late-19th and early-20th centuries, and freight then moved from rail to road after World War II, leading to the abandonment of the goods yards in the early 1980s. The land lay derelict until the Paddington Waterside Partnership was established in 1998 to co-ordinate the regeneration of the area between the Westway, Praed Street and Westbourne Terrace. This includes major developments on the goods yard site (now branded Paddington Central) and around the canal (Paddington Basin). As of October 2017 much of these developments have been completed and are in use.[39]

Renewal proposal, 2018–2023

PaddingtonNow BID put forward a renewal bid in 2017 covering the period April 2018 to March 2023, which would be supported by a levy on local businesses. Development schemes for St. Mary's Hospital and Paddington Square are likely to commence in this period, and the impact of the opening of the Elizabeth line in 2018 would be soon felt.[39]

Religion

Paddington has a number of Anglican churches, including St James's, St Mary Magdalene,St David's Welsh Church and St Peter's. In addition, there is a large Muslim population in and around Paddington.

People from Paddington

Notable residents

Between 1805 and 1817, the great actress Sarah Siddons lived at Desborough House,[42] (which was demolished before 1853 to make way for the Great Western Railway) and was buried at Paddington Green, near the later graves of the eminent painters Benjamin Haydon and William Collins.[43]: p.183  Her brother Charles Kemble also built a house, Desborough Lodge, in the vicinity—in which she may have lived later.[11]: p.230  In later years, the actress Yootha Joyce, best known for her part in the classic television comedy George and Mildred, lived at 198 Sussex Gardens.[44]

One of Napoleon's nephews, Prince Louis Lucien Bonaparte (1813–1891), a notable comparative linguist and dialectologist, who spent most of his adult life in England, had a house in Norfolk Terrace, Westbourne Park.[11]: p.200 

The eccentric philanthropist Ann Thwaytes lived at 17 Hyde Park Gardens between 1840 and 1866.[45][46]

The Victorian poet Robert Browning moved from No. 1 Chichester Road to Beauchamp Lodge, 19 Warwick Crescent, in 1862 and lived there until 1887.[11]: pp.199  He is reputed to have named that locality, on the junction of two canals, "Little Venice". But this has been disputed by Lord Kinross in 1966[47][22] and more recently by londoncanals.uk[48] who both assert that Lord Byron humorously coined the name. The name is now applied, more loosely, to a longer reach of the canal system.

St Mary's Hospital in Praed Street is the site of several notable medical accomplishments. In 1874, C. R. Alder Wright synthesised heroin (diacetylmorphine). Also there, in 1928, Sir Alexander Fleming first isolated penicillin, earning the award of a Nobel Prize. The hospital has an Alexander Fleming Laboratory Museum[49] where visitors can see Fleming's laboratory, restored to its 1928 condition, and explore the story of Fleming and the discovery and development of penicillin through displays and video.

Edward Wilson, physician, naturalist and ornithologist, who died in 1912 on Captain Robert Scott's ill-fated British Antarctic expedition, had earlier practised as a doctor in Paddington. The former Senior Street primary school was renamed the Edward Wilson School after him in 1951.[11]: pp.266 

British painter Lucian Freud had his studio in Paddington, first at Delamere Terrace from 1943 to 1962, and then at 124 Clarendon Crescent from 1962 to 1977.[50]

Education

In popular culture

Paddington in the 17th century is one of the settings in the fiction-based-on-fact novel A Spurious Brood, which tells the story of Katherine More, whose children were transported to America on board the Pilgrim Fathers' ship, the Mayflower.

Timothy Forsyte of John Galsworthy's The Forsyte Saga and other relatives resided in Bayswater Road.[51]

Paddington Bear, from "deepest, darkest Peru", emigrated to England via Paddington station.[52]

The films The Blue Lamp (1950) and Never Let Go (1960) depict many Paddington streets, which suffered bombing in World War II and were subsequently demolished in the early 1960s to make way for the Westway elevated road and the Warwick Estate housing redevelopment.

Image gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ "London's Places" (PDF). The London Plan. Greater London Authority. 2011. p. 46. (PDF) from the original on 8 April 2012. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  2. ^ a b Brooks, C. "Paddington", in: Internet Surname Database.
  3. ^ Robins, pp 1–5
  4. ^ Robins, pp 7–9
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Weinreb, Ben (1986). The London Encyclopedia. Bethesda, Maryland: Adler & Adler. pp. 572–573. ISBN 978-0-917561-07-8.
  6. ^ Robins, p 12
  7. ^ Holbein's Miniature of Jane Pemberton – a further note. Author: Lorne Campbell. Source: The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 132, No. 1044 (Mar. 1990), pp. 213–214.
  8. ^ Ossulstone Hundred at British History Online
  9. ^ a b Noorthouck, J., A New History of London 1773; Online edition sponsored by Centre for Metropolitan History: (Book 2, Ch. 1: Situation and general view of London) Date accessed: 6 July 2009.
  10. ^ a b Inwood, Stephen (1998). A History of London. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-67153-5.
  11. ^ a b c d e Elrington C. R. (Editor), Baker T. F. T., Bolton D. K., Croot P. E. C. (1989) A History of the County of Middlesex (Access page number from the Table of Contents])
  12. ^ Walford, Edward. "Tyburn and Tyburnia". Old and New London: Volume 5. British History Online. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  13. ^ Brewer, E. Cobham. "Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (1898)". Bartleby.com. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  14. ^ Robins, William. Paddington Past and Present. Caxton Steam Printing (1853), pp. iv–v.
  15. ^ Robins, pp. 110–111.
  16. ^ Place: Paddington at Open Domesday.
  17. ^ Robins, p. 114
  18. ^ Name: Padda at Open Domesday.
  19. ^ Grose, Francis Paddington in A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, 3rd edn, Hooper and Wigstead, London 1796. Online copy at archive.org
  20. ^ Brewer, Rev. E. Cobham A Dictionary of Phrase and Fable p.869, revised edn., Cassell 2001
  21. ^ "Local Government Act 1963". Legislation.gov.uk. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  22. ^ a b . London Canals. 1966. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  23. ^ . Paddington Waterside Partnership. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  24. ^ "Paddington Water Taxi service launched". The Paddington Partnership. 6 June 2017. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  25. ^ "Explore Paddington Central". British Land. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  26. ^ "Events". British Land. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  27. ^ a b c d e (PDF). Transport for London. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 May 2019.
  28. ^ a b (PDF). Rail Delivery Group. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 February 2019.
  29. ^ (PDF). Transport for London. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 May 2019.
  30. ^ (PDF). Transport for London. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 May 2018.
  31. ^ (PDF). Transport for London. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 January 2019.
  32. ^ (PDF). Transport for London. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 October 2018.
  33. ^ "Cycling". Canal & River Trust.
  34. ^ . Sustrans. Archived from the original on 16 May 2019.
  35. ^ "Find a docking station". Transport for London.
  36. ^ "Paddington Arm (Grand Union Canal) | Canal & River Trust". canalrivertrust.org.uk. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  37. ^ "Heatherwick Studio | Design & Architecture | Rolling Bridge". Heatherwick Studio | Design & Architecture. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  38. ^ "Regent's Canal | Canal & River Trust". canalrivertrust.org.uk. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  39. ^ a b "Paddington Renewal Proposal 2018–2013" (PDF). PaddingtonNow. 2017. (PDF) from the original on 2 October 2017. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  40. ^ Jeal, Tim (1989). Baden-Powell. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09-170670-X.
  41. ^ "Bellator 144: Michael Page aiming to be the new face of mixed martial arts in the UK". The Daily Telegraph. London. 23 October 2015. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  42. ^ From differences in the following two sources, it may be inferred that Mrs Siddons lived in Desborough House, not Desborough Lodge. The former was destroyed before 1853, the latter a few years later when Cirencester and Woodchester streets were built.
  43. ^ Robins, William Paddington Past and Present Caxton Steam Printing (1853)
  44. ^ Page 7369 entry in London Gazette, 28 May 1981
  45. ^ Bundock, Mike (2000). Herne Bay Clock Tower: A Descriptive History. Herne Bay: Pierhead Publications. ISBN 9780953897704
  46. ^ Friends of Broadwater and Worthing Cemetery: Broadsheet, Issue 10, Spring 2011 "Ann Thwaytes" by Rosemeary Pearson, p.11.
  47. ^ Letter to the Daily Telegraph, 1966
  48. ^ The history of the place name known as 'Little Venice' 9 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ Fleming Museum 11 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  50. ^ Debray, C. Lucian Freud: The Studio (2010)
  51. ^ Galsworthy, J. The Forsyte Saga p.441, Heinemann edn 1922
  52. ^ (History) All about Paddington 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine at paddington.com

External links

  •   Media related to Paddington, London at Wikimedia Commons

paddington, this, article, about, district, london, film, same, name, film, other, uses, disambiguation, area, city, westminster, central, london, england, medieval, parish, then, metropolitan, borough, integrated, with, westminster, greater, london, 1965, sta. This article is about the district of London For the film of the same name see Paddington film For other uses see Paddington disambiguation Paddington is an area in the City of Westminster in central London England 1 A medieval parish then a metropolitan borough it was integrated with Westminster and Greater London in 1965 Paddington station designed by the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel opened in 1847 It is also the site of St Mary s Hospital and the former Paddington Green Police Station PaddingtonSt Mary s HospitalPaddingtonLocation within Greater LondonOS grid referenceTQ267814London boroughWestminsterCeremonial countyGreater LondonRegionLondonCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townLondonPostcode districtW2 W9Dialling code020PoliceMetropolitanFireLondonAmbulanceLondonUK ParliamentCities of London and WestminsterWestminster NorthLondon AssemblyWest CentralList of places UK England London 51 31 02 N 0 10 23 W 51 5172 N 0 1730 W 51 5172 0 1730Paddington Waterside aims to regenerate former railway and canal land Districts within Paddington are Maida Vale Westbourne and Bayswater including Lancaster Gate Contents 1 History 1 1 Early Modern period 1 2 Tyburnia 1 3 Etymology 1 4 Colloquial expressions 2 Geography 3 Governance 4 Landmarks 4 1 Browning s Pool 4 2 London Paddington Station 4 3 Paddington Basin 4 4 Paddington Central 4 5 Paddington Green 5 Transport 5 1 Rail 5 1 1 National Rail 5 1 2 London Underground 5 1 3 Heritage 5 2 Buses 5 3 Road 5 4 Cycling 5 5 Canal 6 Development 6 1 Renewal proposal 2018 2023 7 Religion 8 People from Paddington 9 Notable residents 10 Education 11 In popular culture 12 Image gallery 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory Edit A map showing the wards of Paddington Metropolitan Borough as they appeared in 1916 The earliest extant references to Padington or Padintun as in the Saxon Chartularies 959 2 historically a part of Middlesex appear in documentation of purported tenth century land grants to the monks of Westminster by Edgar the Peaceful as confirmed by Archbishop Dunstan However the documents provenance is much later and likely to have been forged after the 1066 Norman conquest There is no mention of the place or Westbourne or Knightsbridge in the Domesday Book of 1086 3 It has been reasonably speculated that a Saxon settlement led by the followers of Padda an Anglo Saxon chieftain was located around the intersection of the northern and western Roman roads corresponding with the Edgware Road Watling Street and the Harrow and Uxbridge Roads 4 5 From the tenth century Paddington was owned by Westminster Abbey which was later confirmed by the Plantagenet kings in a charter from 1222 This charter mentions a chapel and a farm situated in the area 5 While a 12th century document cited by the cleric Isaac Maddox 1697 1759 establishes that part of the land was held by brothers Richard and William de Padinton 6 They and their descendants carried out activities in Paddington these were known by records dating from 1168 to 1485 They were the earliest known tenant farmers of the land 5 During King Henry VIII s dissolution the property of Paddington was seized by the crown However King Edward VI granted the land to the Bishop of London in 1550 Successive bishops would later lease farmlands to tenants and city merchants One such in the 1540s was Thomas North who translated Plutarch s Parallel Lives into English in 1579 Shakespeare would later use this work and was said to have performed in taverns along Edgware Road 5 In the later Elizabethan and early Stuart era the rectory manor and associated estate houses were occupied by the Small or Smale family Nicholas Small was a clothworker who was sufficiently well connected to have Holbein paint a portrait of his wife Jane Small Nicholas died in 1565 and his wife married again to Nicholas Parkinson of Paddington who became master of the Clothworkers Company Jane Small continued to live in Paddington after her second husband s death and her manor house was big enough to have been let to Sir John Popham the attorney general in the 1580s They let the building that became in this time Blowers Inn 7 Early Modern period Edit As the regional population grew in the 17th century Paddington s ancient Hundred of Ossulstone was split into divisions Holborn Division replaced the hundred for most administrative purposes 8 A church the predecessor of St Mary was built in Paddington in 1679 9 St Mary on Paddington a Georgian church commissioned in 1788 In 1740 John Frederick leased the estate in Paddington and it is from his granddaughters and their families that many of Paddington s street names are derived 5 The New Road was built in 1756 7 to link the villages of Paddington and Islington 10 260 By 1773 a contemporary historian felt and wrote that London may now be said to include two cities London and Westminster one borough Southwark and forty six antient ancient villages among which Paddington and adjoining Marybone Marylebone 9 During the 18th century several French Huguenots called Paddington village home These included jewellers nobility and skilled craftsmen and men such as Claudius Amyand surgeon to King George II The French nobility built magnificent gardens that lasted up until the 19th century 5 Roman roads formed the parish s northeastern and southern boundaries from Marble Arch Watling Street later Edgware Road and the Uxbridge road known by the 1860s in this neighbourhood as Bayswater Road They were toll roads in much of the 18th century before and after the dismantling of the permanent Tyburn gallows tree at their junction in 1759 a junction now known as Marble Arch 11 p 174 The Tyburn gallows might have been a reason why expansion and urban development from London slowed in Paddington as public execution was taking place there up until 1783 5 Paddington station first opened in 1838Only in 1801 did major construction to Paddington occur This happened when the bishops leased land to the Grand Junction Canal where a direct trade link could now take place between London and the Midlands bringing more employment to the area The canal would remain dominant until Regent s Canal was built in 1820 Construction and building projects would take place from east to west and south to north throughout the 19th century increasing its population in a rapid pace overtaking the village scene of Paddington This population increase would go from 1 881 to 46 305 between 1801 and 1851 respectively with 10 000 new inhabitants added every decade thereafter 5 Paddington station first opened in 1838 with the first underground line in 1863 Metropolitan 5 Paddington was one of the few districts in London that had a migrant majority population by 1881 10 416 With a thriving Greek and Jewish community present in the mid 19th century During the period several Victorian churches were demolished owing to structural decay Victorian housing developed into slums giving the area an unsavoury reputation However in the 1930s massive rebuilding and improvements projects were made However even as late as the 1950s Paddington was a byword for overcrowding poverty and vice Between the 1960s and 1980s the area would see vast improvements and redevelopments in city planning 5 Tyburnia Edit Main article Tyburnia The southeast section of Tyburnia used to be a shanty town in the 1790s before the Canal was built and brought much needed employment to its inhabitants The area was built up during the course of the Napoleonic Wars 5 In the 19th century the part of the parish most sandwiched between Edgware Road and Westbourne Terrace Gloucester Terrace and Craven Hill bounded to the south by Bayswater Road was known as Tyburnia The district formed the centrepiece of an 1824 masterplan by Samuel Pepys Cockerell to redevelop the Tyburn Estate historic lands of the Bishop of London into a residential area to rival Belgravia 12 The area was laid out in the mid 1800s when grand squares and cream stuccoed terraces started to fill the acres between Paddington station and Hyde Park however the plans were never realised in full Despite this Thackeray described the residential district of Tyburnia as the elegant the prosperous the polite Tyburnia the most respectable district of the habitable globe 13 Etymology Edit Derivation of the name is uncertain Speculative explanations include Padre ing tun explained as father s meadow village Pad ing tun pack horse meadow village 14 and Paeding tun village of the race of Paed 15 the last being the cited suggestion of the Victorian Anglo Saxon scholar John Mitchell Kemble There is another Paddington in Surrey recorded in the Domesday Book as Padendene 16 and later as Paddingdon perhaps to be derived from Old English dene denu valley whereas Paddington in Middlesex is commonly traced back to Old English tun farm homestead town Both place names share the same first part a personal name rendered as Pad d a of uncertain origin giving Padda s valley for the place in Surrey and homestead of Padda s people for the place in Middlesex 2 That both place names would refer to the same individual or ancient family 17 is pure speculation A lord named Padda is named in the Domesday Book associated with Brampton Suffolk 18 Colloquial expressions Edit An 18th century dictionary gives Paddington Fair Day An execution day Tyburn being in the parish or neighbourhood of Paddington To dance the Paddington frisk to be hanged 19 Public executions were abolished in England in 1868 20 Geography EditThe Paddington district is centred around Paddington railway station The conventional recognised boundary of the district is much smaller than the longstanding pre mid 19th century parish That parish was virtually equal to the borough abolished in 1965 It is divided from a northern offshoot Maida Vale by the Regent s Canal its overlap is the artisan and touristic neighbourhood of Little Venice In the east of the district around Paddington Green it remains divided from Marylebone by Edgware Road as commonly heard in spoken form the Edgware Road In the south west it is bounded by its south and western offshoot Bayswater A final offshoot Westbourne rises to the north west Governance Edit An 1834 map of the Parliamentary Borough of St Marylebone showing Paddington in green and St Pancras yellow These Parliamentary Boroughs like the subsequent Metropolitan Boroughs used the ancient parish boundaries The former Paddington Town Hall Paddington was part of the Metropolitan Borough of Paddington the headquarters of which was at Paddington Town Hall until 1965 when the area became part of the enlarged City of Westminster 21 Landmarks EditBrowning s Pool Edit A lagoon created in the 1810s at the convergence of the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal the Regent s Canal and the Paddington Basin It is an important focal point of the Little Venice area It is reputedly named after Robert Browning the poet More recently known as the Little Venice Lagoon it contains a small islet known as Browning s Island Although Browning was thought to have coined the name Little Venice for this spot there are strong arguments Lord Byron was responsible 22 London Paddington Station Edit Main article London Paddington station Paddington station is the iconic landmark associated with the area In the station are statues of its designer Isambard Kingdom Brunel and the children s fiction character Paddington Bear Paddington Basin Edit Main article Paddington Basin The terminus of the Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal was originally known as the Paddington Basin and all the land to the south was developed into housing and commercial property and titled The Grand Junction Estate The majority of the housing was bounded by Praed Street Sussex Gardens Edgware Road and Norfolk Place Land and buildings not used for the canal undertaking remained after 1929 with the renamed Grand Junction Company which functioned as a property company While retaining its own name it was taken over in 1972 by the Amalgamated Investment and Property Company which went into liquidation in 1976 Prior to the liquidation the Welbeck Estate Securities Group acquired the entire estate comprising 525 houses 15 shops and the Royal Exchange public House in Sale Place The surrounding area is now known as Merchant Square A former transshipment facility the surrounds of the canal basin named Merchant Square have been redeveloped to provide 2 000 000 sq ft 190 000 m2 of offices homes shops and leisure facilities 23 The redeveloped basin has some innovative features including Heatherwicks Rolling Bridge the Merchant Square Fan Bridge and the Floating Pocket Park 24 Paddington Central Edit Further information Paddington Waterside PaddingtonCentral Situated to the north of the railway as it enters Paddington station and to the south of the Westway flyover and with the canal to the east the former railway goods yard has been developed into a modern complex with wellbeing leisure retail and leisure facilities 25 The public area from the canal to Sheldon Square with the amphitheatre hosts leisure facilities and special events 26 Paddington Green Edit Main article Paddington Green London A green space and conservation area in the east of the Paddington district immediately to the north of the Westway and west of Edgware Road It includes St Mary on Paddington Green Church The Paddington Green campus of the City of Westminster College is adjacent to the Green Paddington Green Police Station is immediately to the north west of the intersection of Westway and Edgware Road Transport Edit Paddington railway station Rail Edit Paddington station is on the London Underground and National Rail networks It is in London fare zone 1 27 National Rail Edit Great Western Railway services from Paddington run towards Slough Maidenhead and Reading with intercity services continuing towards destinations in South West England and South Wales including Oxford Worcester Bristol Cardiff Exeter Plymouth and Penzance 28 The Elizabeth line operated by Transport for London TfL runs a stopping service from Paddington to Reading either as part of through running services from the central and eastern parts of the Elizabeth line or starting from Paddington These trains mostly depart from the deep level Elizabeth line platforms underneath the western side of the mainline station These deep level Elizabeth line tracks emerge above ground adjacent to the mainline tracks just west of Royal Oak tube station and join them at that point thereafter sharing the relief line tracks with some Great Western Railway stopping services as far as the Elizabeth line terminus at Reading Elizabeth line services link the Paddington area both to destinations in west London and Berkshire and to the centre and eastern side of London Trains to Heathrow Airport also depart from Paddington operated both by the Elizabeth line stopping services via Ealing Broadway and the Heathrow Express no intermediate stops 27 28 London Underground Edit There are two London Underground tube stations in the Paddington station complex The Bakerloo Circle and District lines call at the station on Praed Street which from the main concourse is opposite platform 3 This links Paddington directly to destinations across Central and West London including Baker Street Earl s Court Oxford Circus South Kensington Victoria Waterloo Westminster and Wimbledon 27 The Circle and Hammersmith amp City lines call at the station near the Paddington Basin to the north of platform 12 Trains from this station link the area directly to Hammersmith via Shepherd s Bush to the west Eastbound trains pass through Baker Street King s Cross St Pancras Liverpool Street in the City Whitechapel and Barking 27 Lancaster Gate tube station is also in the area served by Central line trains 27 Heritage Edit Paddington station was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel The permanent building opened in 1854 Paddington Bear was also named after the station in Michael Bond s 1958 book A Bear Called Paddington Paddington is found at the station by the Brown family He is lost having just arrived in London from darkest Peru Buses Edit London Buses 7 23 27 36 46 205 and 332 and night buses N7 and N205 serve Paddington station Buses 23 27 and 36 operate 24 hours daily 29 Routes 94 and 148 serve Lancaster Gate station to the south of Paddington Both routes operate 24 hours daily supplemented by route N207 at nights 30 Road Edit Several key routes pass through or around the Paddington area including A40 Westway Marylebone Flyover westbound towards White City Acton and the M40 motorway towards Oxford and Birmingham A402 Bayswater Road eastbound towards Marble Arch Oxford Circus and Holborn via A40 Oxford Street and Park Lane Westbound towards Notting Hill Shepherd s Bush and Chiswick A404 Harrow Road northeast towards Kensal Green Wembley and Harrow A4205 Praed Street Westbourne Terrace A4206 Bishop s Bridge Road southwest towards Notting Hill A4209 Sussex Gardens A5 Edgware Road southbound to Marble Arch and Park Lane Northbound to Kilburn Hendon the M1 motorway and Edgware Forms part of the London Inner Ring Road A501 Marylebone Flyover Marylebone Road eastbound towards Regent s Park King s Cross and the City Forms part of the London Inner Ring Road Cycling Edit Cycling infrastructure is provided in Paddington by Transport for London TfL and the Canal amp River Trust Several cycle routes pass through the area including Cycle Superhighway 3 CS3 part of the East West Superhighway CS3 begins just south of Paddington at Lancaster Gate and carries cyclists southbound through Hyde Park to South Kensington The route continues eastbound passing Hyde Park Corner Embankment Blackfriars Tower Hill and Canary Wharf en route to Barking in the East End The route runs predominantly on traffic free cycle track The route is also unbroken and signposted 31 Quietway 2 Q2 runs on traffic free paths or residential streets Westbound the route runs unbroken and signposted to Bayswater and Ladbroke Grove en route to East Acton Eastbound the route is incomplete but will run unbroken to Bloomsbury via Marylebone and Fitzrovia As the route runs on traffic free or low traffic routes it is indirect 32 Grand Union Canal towpath a shared use path running direct to Little Venice Westbourne Park and Willesden and eventually Hayes The route is managed by the Canal amp River Trust 33 Regent s Canal towpath runs alongside the Regent s Canal on residential streets from Little Venice to Lisson Grove The route then joins the towpath heading eastbound which provides Paddington with a direct connection to Regent s Park Camden Town and King s Cross The route is managed by the Canal amp River Trust Sustrans also propose that National Cycle Route 6 NCR 6 will begin at Paddington and run northwest along the Grand Union Canal towpath The route when complete will run signposted and unbroken to Keswick Cumbria Within the M25 the route will pass through Hayes Uxbridge and Watford 34 Santander Cycles a London wide bike sharing system operates in Paddington with several docking stations in the area 35 Canal Edit The Rolling Bridge at Paddington designed by Thomas Heatherwick The Paddington Arm of the Grand Union Canal runs from Paddington to Hayes via Westbourne Park and Willesden Beyond Hayes onward destinations include Slough the Colne Valley and Aylesbury The Paddington Basin is in the area as is Little Venice A towpath runs unbroken from Paddington to Hayes 36 The Rolling Bridge at the Paddington Basin was designed by Thomas Heatherwick who wanted to create a bridge that instead of breaking apart to let boats through would get out of the way instead Heatherwick s website cites the fluid coiling tails of the animatronic dinosaurs of Jurassic Park as the initial influence behind the Bridge 37 The Regent s Canal begins at Little Venice heading east towards Maida Vale Regent s Park Camden Town King s Cross Old Street and Mile End en route to Limehouse A towpath runs along the canal from Paddington to Limehouse broken only by the Maida Hill and Islington tunnels 38 Development EditMain article Paddington Waterside Commercial traffic on the Grand Junction Canal which became the Grand Union Canal in 1929 dwindled because of railway competition in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and freight then moved from rail to road after World War II leading to the abandonment of the goods yards in the early 1980s The land lay derelict until the Paddington Waterside Partnership was established in 1998 to co ordinate the regeneration of the area between the Westway Praed Street and Westbourne Terrace This includes major developments on the goods yard site now branded Paddington Central and around the canal Paddington Basin As of October 2017 update much of these developments have been completed and are in use 39 Renewal proposal 2018 2023 Edit PaddingtonNow BID put forward a renewal bid in 2017 covering the period April 2018 to March 2023 which would be supported by a levy on local businesses Development schemes for St Mary s Hospital and Paddington Square are likely to commence in this period and the impact of the opening of the Elizabeth line in 2018 would be soon felt 39 Religion EditPaddington has a number of Anglican churches including St James s St Mary Magdalene St David s Welsh Church and St Peter s In addition there is a large Muslim population in and around Paddington People from Paddington EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Paddington news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Category People from Paddington and St Mary s Hospital London Notable births Kriss Akabusi athlete Edward Bailey Ashmore Army officer Robert Baden Powell Army officer 40 Merton Barker cricketer and field hockey player George Butterworth classical music composer Joe Cole professional footballer Joan Collins actress Elvis Costello pop musician George Thomas Dorrell recipient of the Victoria Cross Paul Eddington actor Les Ferdinand professional footballer Andy Fraser professional songwriter and bass guitarist Ray Galton comedy writer Simon Hawk cricketer Edward Thomas E T Heron 1867 1949 cine trade publisher William Rees Jeffreys transport campaigner Alan Johnson politician Paddington Tom Jones boxer Patrick Macnee actor Norman Mischler cricketer Rhona Mitra actress Alfred Molina actor Steve New pop musician Hermione Norris actress Paul Onwuanibe business magnate George Osborne politician Michael Page professional boxer and mixed martial artist 41 William Page historian Mark Pougatch radio and television broadcaster journalist and author Seal pop musician David Suchet actor John Suchet ITN newsreader journalist Kiefer Sutherland actor Emma Thompson actress Ferdinand Maurice Felix West recipient of the Victoria Cross Alan Turing mathematician engineerNotable residents EditBetween 1805 and 1817 the great actress Sarah Siddons lived at Desborough House 42 which was demolished before 1853 to make way for the Great Western Railway and was buried at Paddington Green near the later graves of the eminent painters Benjamin Haydon and William Collins 43 p 183 Her brother Charles Kemble also built a house Desborough Lodge in the vicinity in which she may have lived later 11 p 230 In later years the actress Yootha Joyce best known for her part in the classic television comedy George and Mildred lived at 198 Sussex Gardens 44 One of Napoleon s nephews Prince Louis Lucien Bonaparte 1813 1891 a notable comparative linguist and dialectologist who spent most of his adult life in England had a house in Norfolk Terrace Westbourne Park 11 p 200 The eccentric philanthropist Ann Thwaytes lived at 17 Hyde Park Gardens between 1840 and 1866 45 46 The Victorian poet Robert Browning moved from No 1 Chichester Road to Beauchamp Lodge 19 Warwick Crescent in 1862 and lived there until 1887 11 pp 199 He is reputed to have named that locality on the junction of two canals Little Venice But this has been disputed by Lord Kinross in 1966 47 22 and more recently by londoncanals uk 48 who both assert that Lord Byron humorously coined the name The name is now applied more loosely to a longer reach of the canal system St Mary s Hospital in Praed Street is the site of several notable medical accomplishments In 1874 C R Alder Wright synthesised heroin diacetylmorphine Also there in 1928 Sir Alexander Fleming first isolated penicillin earning the award of a Nobel Prize The hospital has an Alexander Fleming Laboratory Museum 49 where visitors can see Fleming s laboratory restored to its 1928 condition and explore the story of Fleming and the discovery and development of penicillin through displays and video Edward Wilson physician naturalist and ornithologist who died in 1912 on Captain Robert Scott s ill fated British Antarctic expedition had earlier practised as a doctor in Paddington The former Senior Street primary school was renamed the Edward Wilson School after him in 1951 11 pp 266 British painter Lucian Freud had his studio in Paddington first at Delamere Terrace from 1943 to 1962 and then at 124 Clarendon Crescent from 1962 to 1977 50 Education EditFor education in Paddington see List of schools in the City of Westminster In popular culture EditSee also Paddington Green London Paddington in the 17th century is one of the settings in the fiction based on fact novel A Spurious Brood which tells the story of Katherine More whose children were transported to America on board the Pilgrim Fathers ship the Mayflower Timothy Forsyte of John Galsworthy s The Forsyte Saga and other relatives resided in Bayswater Road 51 Paddington Bear from deepest darkest Peru emigrated to England via Paddington station 52 The films The Blue Lamp 1950 and Never Let Go 1960 depict many Paddington streets which suffered bombing in World War II and were subsequently demolished in the early 1960s to make way for the Westway elevated road and the Warwick Estate housing redevelopment Image gallery Edit Paddington Basin Grand Union Canal Edgware Road Sussex Gardens Victoria pub Gloucester SquareSee also Edit London portalPaddington Green Paddington Bridge Paddington BasinReferences Edit London s Places PDF The London Plan Greater London Authority 2011 p 46 Archived PDF from the original on 8 April 2012 Retrieved 27 May 2014 a b Brooks C Paddington in Internet Surname Database Robins pp 1 5 Robins pp 7 9 a b c d e f g h i j k Weinreb Ben 1986 The London Encyclopedia Bethesda Maryland Adler amp Adler pp 572 573 ISBN 978 0 917561 07 8 Robins p 12 Holbein s Miniature of Jane Pemberton a further note Author Lorne Campbell Source The Burlington Magazine Vol 132 No 1044 Mar 1990 pp 213 214 Ossulstone Hundred at British History Online a b Noorthouck J A New History of London 1773 Online edition sponsored by Centre for Metropolitan History Book 2 Ch 1 Situation and general view of London Date accessed 6 July 2009 a b Inwood Stephen 1998 A History of London London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 67153 5 a b c d e Elrington C R Editor Baker T F T Bolton D K Croot P E C 1989 A History of the County of Middlesex Access page number from the Table of Contents Walford Edward Tyburn and Tyburnia Old and New London Volume 5 British History Online Retrieved 27 September 2013 Brewer E Cobham Brewer s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable 1898 Bartleby com Retrieved 27 September 2013 Robins William Paddington Past and Present Caxton Steam Printing 1853 pp iv v Robins pp 110 111 Place Paddington at Open Domesday Robins p 114 Name Padda at Open Domesday Grose Francis Paddington in A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue 3rd edn Hooper and Wigstead London 1796 Online copy at archive org Brewer Rev E Cobham A Dictionary of Phrase and Fable p 869 revised edn Cassell 2001 Local Government Act 1963 Legislation gov uk Retrieved 25 April 2020 a b Letter to the Daily Telegraph London Canals 1966 Archived from the original on 2 February 2017 Retrieved 1 October 2017 Paddington Basin Merchant Square Paddington Waterside Partnership Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 1 October 2017 Paddington Water Taxi service launched The Paddington Partnership 6 June 2017 Retrieved 1 October 2017 Explore Paddington Central British Land Retrieved 2 October 2017 Events British Land Retrieved 2 October 2017 a b c d e London s Rail amp Tube services PDF Transport for London Archived from the original PDF on 11 May 2019 a b National Rail Train Operators PDF Rail Delivery Group Archived from the original PDF on 4 February 2019 Buses from Paddington PDF Transport for London Archived from the original PDF on 15 May 2019 Buses from Lancaster Gate PDF Transport for London Archived from the original PDF on 16 May 2018 East West Cycle Superhighway CS3 Tower Hill to Lancaster Gate PDF Transport for London Archived from the original PDF on 27 January 2019 Quietway 2 West East Acton to Notting Hill PDF Transport for London Archived from the original PDF on 1 October 2018 Cycling Canal amp River Trust Route 6 Sustrans Archived from the original on 16 May 2019 Find a docking station Transport for London Paddington Arm Grand Union Canal Canal amp River Trust canalrivertrust org uk Retrieved 16 May 2019 Heatherwick Studio Design amp Architecture Rolling Bridge Heatherwick Studio Design amp Architecture Retrieved 16 May 2019 Regent s Canal Canal amp River Trust canalrivertrust org uk Retrieved 16 May 2019 a b Paddington Renewal Proposal 2018 2013 PDF PaddingtonNow 2017 Archived PDF from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Jeal Tim 1989 Baden Powell London Hutchinson ISBN 0 09 170670 X Bellator 144 Michael Page aiming to be the new face of mixed martial arts in the UK The Daily Telegraph London 23 October 2015 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 From differences in the following two sources it may be inferred that Mrs Siddons lived in Desborough House not Desborough Lodge The former was destroyed before 1853 the latter a few years later when Cirencester and Woodchester streets were built Robins William Paddington Past and Present Caxton Steam Printing 1853 Page 7369 entry in London Gazette 28 May 1981 Bundock Mike 2000 Herne Bay Clock Tower A Descriptive History Herne Bay Pierhead Publications ISBN 9780953897704 Friends of Broadwater and Worthing Cemetery Broadsheet Issue 10 Spring 2011 Ann Thwaytes by Rosemeary Pearson p 11 Letter to the Daily Telegraph 1966 The history of the place name known as Little Venice Archived 9 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Fleming Museum Archived 11 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Debray C Lucian Freud The Studio 2010 Galsworthy J The Forsyte Saga p 441 Heinemann edn 1922 History All about Paddington Archived 6 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine at paddington comExternal links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Paddington Maida Vale Media related to Paddington London at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paddington amp oldid 1158201615, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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