2010
TQ3072 : 22 Leigham Court Road
taken 15 years ago, near to Streatham, Lambeth, England

22 Leigham Court Road
Formerly known as Leigham Lodge and the home of Beriah Drew, Lord Mayor of Leigham, solicitor and developer of Leigham Court Road. It was built in 1843 and was the first house in the road. A fairly typical stucco villa of the period except for the prodigious chimneys. Grade II listed. It is within the Leigham Court Road (North) Conservation Area.
Leigham Court Road was laid out in 1839, and while development began in the early 1840s, it didn’t really take off until after the building of the Crystal Palace and West End Railway and the opening of Streatham Hill station in 1856. Quite a number of the original, large Victorian houses survive at either end of the road, and even though their grounds have in some cases since been built on, the remaining mature trees and general landscaping have enabled the area to retain “much of its original arcadian character.” Information from Lambeth Council (Link
(Archive Link
) ).
Leigham Court Road was laid out in 1839, and while development began in the early 1840s, it didn’t really take off until after the building of the Crystal Palace and West End Railway and the opening of Streatham Hill station in 1856. Quite a number of the original, large Victorian houses survive at either end of the road, and even though their grounds have in some cases since been built on, the remaining mature trees and general landscaping have enabled the area to retain “much of its original arcadian character.” Information from Lambeth Council (Link

