National Gallery, p. 166, and Royal Academy of Arts, p. 185. Wilkins, archt.
College of Physicians, p. 187.
Statue of George IV., by Chantrey.
TRAFALGAR SQUARE.
Built 1829-1850.
Church of
St. Martin's-in-the Fields.
Gibbs, archt., p.127.
It would be easy to add to these Diagrams of streets and squares but I feel I have given enough (if not too many), and will now conclude by saying with two poets-Gascoigne and Southey :
"But of enough enough, and now no more,
As honest old George Gascoigne said of yore."
ABNEY PARK CEMETERY, 134 Addison, Joseph, last moments of, 19
Adelphi Theatre, 179 Admiralty, the, 56 Albert, H.R. H. Prince; collection
of pictures exhibited by, 8 Aldersgate-street, Plan of, 290 Almack's Assembly Rooms, 182 Ambassadors' residences, li Anglesea, Marquis of; his man- sion, 20
Anne, Queen, 4; and her hus- band, 8 Antiquaries, Society of, 58, 189;
library and museum, 190 Apothecaries' Hall, 238 Apsley House, 10; pictures, &c., ib. Archæological and antiquarian at- tractions, xlvi Architectural notabilities,xliii Architects, British, Institute of, 191; admission fees, 191 Architects' Works in London; list of 84, xlv
Armourers' Company, 239
Army; regulations relative to en- Belgrave-square, Plan of, 299
listments, pay, &c., 55
Army and Navy Club, 218
Artillery Ground, 240
Art (Galleries of), xliii
Berkeley-square, Plan of, 300 Bethlehem Hospital for Lunatics,
208; notorious inmates, 209 Billingsgate Market, 74
Birth-places of eminent persons, 241
Bishopsgate-street, Plan of, 291 Blackfriars Bridge, 46
Blind, Schools and Asylums for the, 217
Bloomsbury-square, Plan of, 303 Botanical Gardens, Regent's-park, 33; Kew, 36 Bow-street, Covent-garden, Plan of, 283
Bow Church, and Bow bells, 124 Breweries, 77
Bride's (St.) Church, Fleet-street, 125; source of Wren's idea of its construction, ib. Bridewell, City Prison, 147; Hol-
bein's Picture, 148 Bridges over the Thames; London, 45; Southwark, 46; Black- friars, ib.; Hungerford, ib.; Waterloo, 47; Westminster, 47; Vauxhall, 48 Bridgewater House and its Picture Gallery, 17 British Museum, regulations, mode of admission to the Reading Room, 151; ground plan, 153; origin and progress of the Museum, 152; Egyptian an- tiquities, 154; Assyrian Room, 155; Etruscan Room, 155, 156; Elgin marbles, 156; Phigalian and Lycian marbles, 158; Townley collection, 159; Bronze room, 159; Portland Vase and its mishaps, 159; modern marbles, 160; Medal room, ib.; Romano - British antiquities, 161; library of printed books, ib.; reading- room regulations, 162; manu- scripts, 162; prints, drawings, &c., 163; mineralogy and geology, 164; zoological col- lection, 165
Brompton Cemetery, 134 Brooks's Club, 219
Brunel, Sir I. K., great engineer- ing work by, 49
Buccleuch, Duke of, his town mansion, 14 Buckingham Palace, juggle in which it originated, subse- quent alterations, &c., 1; its chief pictures, 2 Bunhill Fields Burial Ground, 134; its chief tenants, 135; enormous number interred there, 136
Chancery, Inns of, 145 Chancery-lane, 280; Plan, 281 Chapter House, Westminster, 60 Charing Cross to Westminster Abbey, Plan, 285 Charing Cross Hospital, 214 Charitable Institutions and Hospi- tals, 205-217
Charles I., parting with his child- ren, 4; his execution, 6; vicissitudes of the Charing Cross statue, 256
Charles II. born, 4; statue of, 256 Charter-House School and Hospi-
tal, 197; the poor brethren,
198 Chatham (Earl of), where born,
Chaucer, where born, 241 Cheapside, description of, 274; Plan, 275 Chelsea Hospital, 211 Chesterfield House, 18; its associ- ations, 18
Christ's Hospital, 199; its notabi- lities, ib.; eminent scholars, 200; mode of admission, 201.
Burial places of eminent persons, Churches and Places of Worship,
Burials in London, 132
Burlington House, 21; Hogarth's caricature, 22
Cathedral and Episcopal, 94- 129; Dissenting, 129-30; Ro- man Catholic, 130; Foreign 130; Jews, 132
City of London School, 203 City the, and the City Halls and Companies, 225-240, xi, xiv City Prison, Holloway, 151 City Road, 282
Clayton, Mr.; his aquatic feat, 43 Clement's Inn, and its associa- tions, 146
Clerkenwell Sessions House, 139 Clothworkers' Hall, 238 Clubs and Club Houses, 217-225 Coal Exchange, 71; number of Seamen employed in the Trade, 72 Cockney, traditional origin of the epithet, 226 Cold Bath Fields House of Correc- tion, 150
College, v. Heralds, 188 College of Physicians. (See Phy- sicians.)
College of Surgeons. (See Sur- geons.)
Colleges and Schools, 193-205 Colliers, Regulations of the port of London relative to, 45 Colonial Office, 50 Commercial buildings, banks, &c., 61-70. (See the various heads under which same are placed.)
Commercial Docks, 69 Companies of London, and their Halls, 232-240 Conservative Club, 220 Corn Exchange, 71 Cornhill, description of, 276; Plan, 277
Cornwall, Duchy of, office of the, 57 County Courts, 139
Courts of Law and Justice, 136- 140
Covent Garden Market, 75; plan of, 305
Covent Garden Opera House, 178 Cowley, where born, 241
Cowper, the poet, suicidal inten- tions of, 51
Cromwell, Oliver, last moments of, 135; his inauguration, 137
Crystal Palace, site of, 29 Crystal Palace at Sydenham, 1 Custom House, 51
DANISH CHURCH, 131
Deaf and Dumb, Asylum for the, 217
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