HAMPSTEAD


'Hampstead' is a suburb of north London in the London Borough of Camden, located four miles (6.4 km) north-west of Charing Cross. It is known for its intellectual, artistic, musical and literary associations and for the large and hilly parkland Hampstead Heath. It is also home to some of the most expensive housing in the London area, or indeed anywhere in the world. The village of Hampstead has more millionaires within its boundaries than any other area of Britain.[1]

Contents
History
Politics
Notable current and former residents
Sites
Museums
Places of Interest
Pubs
Restaurants
Schools
Transport
Nearest places
Nearest tube stations
Nearest railway station
Nearest hospital
References
External links

History


Although early records of Hampstead can be found in a grant by King Ethelred the Unready to the monastery of St. Peter’s at Westminster (AD 986) and it is referred to in the Domesday Book (1086), the history of Hampstead is generally traced back to the 17th century.
Trustees of the Well started advertising the medicinal qualities of the chalybeate waters (water impregnated with iron) in 1700. Although Hampstead Wells was initially most successful and fashionable, its popularity declined in the 1800s due to competition with other London spas. The spa was demolished in 1882, although a water fountain was left behind.
Hampstead started to expand following the opening of the North London Railway in the 1860s (now the North London Line with passenger services operated by Silverlink), and expanded further after the Charing Cross, Euston & Hampstead Railway opened in 1907 (now part of London Underground's Northern Line) and provided fast travel to central London.
Much luxurious housing was created during the 1870s and 1880s, in the area that is now the political ward of Fitzjohns & Frognal. Much of this housing remains to this day.
During the 20th Century, a number of notable buildings were created. These include:

Hampstead tube station (1907), incidentally the deepest station on the entire Underground network;

Isokon building (1932)

Hillfield court (1932)

2 Willow Road (1938)

Hampstead Theatre (1962)

Swiss Cottage Leisure Centre (1964)

Swiss Cottage Central Library (1964)

Royal Free Hospital (1974)
Of these, the Hampstead Theatre relocated in 2003 (increasing capacity from 140 to 325 seats) and the leisure centre was closed for rebuilding in 2003.
Cultural attractions in the area include the Freud Museum, Keats' House, Kenwood House, Fenton House, The Isokon Building, and the Camden Arts Centre. The large Victorian Hampstead Library and Town Hall was recently converted and extended as a creative industries centre.
Though now considered an integral part of London, Hampstead has retained much of its village atmosphere and charm, with Hampstead High Street playing a vital role in the day to day life of a Hampsteadian.

Politics


Hampstead became part of the County of London in 1889 and in 1899 the Metropolitan Borough of Hampstead was formed. The borough town hall, on Rosslyn Hill, because it was also the location of the Registry Office, can be seen in newsreel footage of many celebrity civil marriages. In 1965 the metropolitan borough was abolished and is former area merged with that of the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn and the Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras to form the modern-day London Borough of Camden.
Hampstead is part of the Hampstead and Highgate constituency and since 1992 the member of parliament has been the former actress Glenda Jackson of the Labour Party.
The area has a significant tradition of educated liberal humanism, sometimes referred to (occasionally disparagingly) as "Hampstead Liberalism".
The area is also home to the left-wing Labour magazine, ''Tribune''.

Notable current and former residents


Hampstead has long been known as a residence of the intelligentsia, including writers, composers, and intellectuals, actors, artists and architects — many of whom created a bohemian community in the late 19th century. In the 1930s it became base to a community of ''avant garde'' artists and writers and was host to a number of émigrés and exiles from Nazi Europe.
Famous past inhabitants have included:

Sir A. J. Ayer — philosopher, philanderer

Sir Arnold Bax — impressionist composer [2]

Cecil Beaton — society man, fashion photographer, style icon[3]

John S. Beckett — musician, composer and conductor

Sybille Bedford — writer, essayist [4]

Sir Isaiah Berlin — philosopher, historian of ideas, man of letters[5]

William Blake — poet, painter, writer, mystic[6]

Dirk Bogarde — actor [7]

Helena Bonham-Carter— actress [8]

Arthur Boyd — Australian painter and sculptor[9]

Marcel Breuer — modernist Hungarian architect and refugee

Sir Richard Burton — explorer[10]

Richard Burton—Hollywood actor[11]

Lord Byron — poet[12]

Elias Canetti — nobel prize winning novelist[13]

John le Carré — author[14]

Dame Agatha Christie — author[15]

Samuel Taylor Coleridge— romantic poet and philosopher[16]

John Constable — artist [17]

Peter Cook — writer and comedian[18]

Milein Cosman — artist

Charles Dickens — author[19]

Jacqueline du Pré — cellist[20]

Daphne du Maurier[21]

Sir Edward Elgar — composer[22]

T. S. Eliot — poet

Sir William Empson— poet and renowned man of letters[23]

Marianne Faithfull[24]

Ian Fleming — author, inventor of James Bond[25]

John Fowles — novelist, lived on the Church Row for many years[26]

Anna Freud[27]

Lucian Freud — artist

Sigmund Freud — psychoanalyst and philosopher[28]

Stephen Fry — writer, actor, comedian and filmmaker

Naum Gabo — artist[29]

John GalsworthyNobel Prize winning novelist[30]

Hugh Gaitskell — renowned leader of the Labour Party (1955-63)[31]

ErnÅ‘ Goldfinger — architect[32]

Sir Ernst Gombrich — art historian, man of letters [33]

Walter Gropius — architect and designer[34]

Thom Gunn — poet[35]

Audrey Hepburn — actress

Barbara Hepworth[36]

Sir Andrew Huxley — nobel laureate [37]

Aldous Huxley — novelist, spiritualist

Leigh Hunt — romantic poet[38]

Samuel Johnson— poet, aphorist, essayist, biographer, lexicographer, wit - typically known as 'Dr Johnson' [39]

John Keats — poet[40]

Hans Keller — musician and writer[41]

Lillie Langtry[42]

D. H. Lawrence — author[43]

Berthold Lubetkin[44]

Anna Mahler — sculpturess and daughter of composer Gustav Mahler[45]

Ramsay MacDonald— former Prime Minister [46]

Baron Yehudi Menuhin — violinist, conductor, child-prodigy, virtuoso [47]

A. A. Milne — author of "Winnie the Pooh"[48]

Sir Jonathan Miller[49]

Lee Miller — photographer, fashion model, actress, war correspondent [50]

Piet Mondrian[51]

Henry Moore — sculptor[52]

Marie-Louise Von Motesiczky — expressionist painter[53]

Florence Nightingale — humanitarian[54]

George Orwell — author[55]

Peter O'Toole[56]

Lady Jane Bailey Paget[57]

Anna Pavlova — ballerina[58]

Sir Roger Penrose — mathematician, theoretical physicist, philosopher, attended UCS[59]

Roland Penrose — artist and curator, surrealist, founder of the ICA[60]

J. B. Priestley — author[61]

Percy Bysshe Shelley— poet and romantic [62]

Sir Percy Selwyn Selwyn-Clarke — Governor of the Seychelles, 1947–1951[63]

Stephen Spender — poet, man of letters, grew up in Frognal Gardens and schooled at UCS[64]

Robert Louis Stevenson [65]

Marie Stopes —world-renowned feminist and campaigner for birth-control [66]

Elizabeth Taylor— actress [67]

Eric Thompson — actor, producer, father of Sophie Thompson and Emma Thompson; married to Phyllida Law.

Evelyn Waugh — author[68]

H. G. Wells — author[69]

Richard Wollheim — renowned philosopher of art

William Wordsworth — poet[70]

Thierry Henry — soccer player[71]

Sir Neil Shields— financier[72]
Hampstead is currently and has been recently home to:

Constantine II of Greece— the (now deposed) King of Greece[73]

Alfred Brendel— world-famous classical pianist[74]

Stephen Kovacevich—world-famous classical pianist, best known for his Brahms sonatas[75]

Rachel Weisz[76]

Russell Crowe

Peter O'Toole

Freddie Highmore

Boy George

Michael Foot[77]

Stephen Fry

Hugh Grant

Hugh Laurie

George Michael

Jonathan Ross

Ricky Gervais

Stephen Merchant

Jeremy Irons

Sienna Miller

Jamie Oliver

Jude Law

Brad Pitt

Tim Roth

Sting

Freddie Ljungberg

Ralph Fiennes

Aliaksandr Hleb

Elizabeth Taylor

Emma Thompson

Kate Winslet

Chris Evans

Russell Brand

David Walliams

Jon Culshaw

Rachel Stevens

Robin van Persie

Melanie Chisholm

Emma Bunton

Patrick Viera

Sites


To the north and east of Hampstead, and separating it from Highgate, is London's largest ancient parkland, Hampstead Heath, which includes the well-known and legally-protected view of the London skyline from Parliament Hill. The Heath, a major place for Londoners to walk and "take the air", has three open-air public swimming ponds; one for men, one for women, and one for mixed bathing, which were originally reservoirs for drinking water and part of the River Fleet.
Local activities include major open-air concerts on summer Saturday evenings on the slopes below Kenwood House, book and poetry readings, fun fairs on the lower reaches of the Heath, period harpsichord recitals at Fenton House, Hampstead Scientific Society and Hampstead Photographic Society.
The largest single place of employment in Hampstead is the Royal Free Hospital in Pond Street, but many small businesses based in the area have international significance. George Martin's Air recording studios, in converted church premises in Lyndhurst Road, is a current example, as Jim Henson's Creature Shop was, before it relocated to California.
The area has some remarkable examples of architecture, one being the Isokon building in Lawn Road, a Grade I listed experiment in collective housing, once home to the likes of Agatha Christie, Henry Moore, Ben Nicholson and Walter Gropius. It was recently restored by Notting Hill Housing Trust.

Museums



Fenton House

Freud Museum

Hampstead Museum / Burgh House

Keats' House

Kenwood House

Places of Interest



Everyman Cinema

Pentameters Theatre

Pubs


Hampstead is well known for its traditional pubs, such as the Holly Bush (which was gas lit until recently), the Spaniard's Inn (where highwayman Dick Turpin took refuge), The Old Bull and Bush and Ye Olde White Bear. Jack Straw's Castle on the edge of the Heath has now been converted into residential flats. Others include:

Freemasons Arms

The Duke of Hamilton

The Magdala, where Ruth Ellis killed her lover.

Restaurants


Hampstead has an eclectic mix of restaurants ranging from French to Thai. Notable and longstanding are The Gaucho Grill, Jin kichi, Tip Top Thai, Al Casbah and Le Cellier du Midi.

Schools


Main articles: List of schools in Hampstead

Hampstead underground station

Transport


Nearest places


Belsize Park

Chalk Farm

Childs Hill

Frognal

Golders Green

Highgate

Primrose Hill

Regent's Park

South Hampstead

St John's Wood

West Hampstead
Nearest tube stations


Hampstead tube station

Belsize Park tube station

★ ''Construction of North End tube station was started but not completed''
Nearest railway station


Hampstead Heath railway station
Nearest hospital


Royal Free Hospital

References


1. [1]
2. [2]
3. [3]
4. [4]
5. [5]
6. [6]
7. ''The private world of Dirk Bogarde'' Independent 28 Mar 2007 accessed 28 Apr 2007
8. [7]
9. [8]
10. [9]
11. [10]
12. [11]
13. http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/ecanetti.htm
14. [12]
15. [13]
16. [14]
17. [15]
18. [16]
19. [17]
20. [18]
21. [19]
22. [20]
23. [21]
24. [22]
25. [23]
26. http://www.camdennewjournal.co.uk/111005/o111005_01.htm
27. [24]
28. Freud and his family moved to 20 Maresfield Gardens, Hampstead in June 1938. His daughter Anna Freud recreating his Vienna consulting room in the house that is now a museum to his memory. Freud died in 1939.
29. [25]
30. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE0D71130F933A0575AC0A966958260&sec=travel&spon=&pagewanted=print
31. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/property/main.jhtml?xml=/property/2004/05/08/phamp08.xml
32. Resident of 2 Willow Road
33. [26]
34. [27]
35. [28]
36. [29]
37. [30]
38. http://www.nndb.com/people/452/000107131/
39. [31]
40. [32]
41. [33]
42. [34]
43. [35]
44. [36]
45. [37]
46. [38]
47. [39]
48. [40]
49. [41]
50. http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/biography/0,,1657064,00.html
51. [42]
52. http://www.artchive.com/artchive/M/moore.html
53. [www.motesiczky.org]
54. [43]
55. [44]
56. [45]
57. http://worldroots.com/brigitte/famous/h/henry8englanddesc-12.htm
58. [46]
59. [47]
60. [48]
61. [49]
62. [50]
63. [51]
64. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=22635
65. [52]
66. [53]
67. [54]
68. [55]
69. [56]
70. [57]
71. [58]
72. Sir Neil Shields obituary - Times Online
73. [59]
74. http://www.newstatesman.com/200102120038
75. http://www.mvdaily.com/articles/2003/05/kovacevich1.htm
76. [60]
77. [61]

External links



London's Literary Village

The Heath and Hampstead Society

The Hampstead Scientific Society

Camden Council

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves