Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1552-1922 (Creation)
Level of description
Extent and medium
80.84 linear metres (approx. 1900 files).
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
The history of the Covent Garden estate will be found in full detail in Vol. XXXVI of the Survey of London (St. Paul, Covent Garden). The land, originally an orchard of Westminster Abbey (hence Convent or Covent Garden) was acquired from the Crown by John Russell, first Earl of Bedford (c.1485-1555) in 1552, and developed between 1630 and 1641 by Francis Russell, fourth Earl (1593-1641) between 1630 and 1641, as the first planned housing scheme in London. Inigo Jones appears to have been largely responsible for planning the lay-out, the central feature of which was an Italian-style 'piazza', the first London square, which later became Covent Garden Market. Many of the records relate to the development of the Market, which was leased by the Bedford Estate during the late 17th and 18th centuries, but actually administered by the Estate during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Other records concern Drury Lane Theatre and the Covent Garden Theatre (now Opera House).
All the property was sold by the eleventh Duke of Bedford in 1918. The Surrey estate, acquired by the Howland family of London and Streatham during the 17th century, came into the possession of the Russells through the marriage of Elizabeth Howland in 1696 to Wriothesley Russell, later second Duke of Bedford (1680-1711). The land was mainly in Streatham (the Manor of Tooting Bec) extending into Stockwell (in Lambeth) and Wandsworth and in Rotherhithe, on the Thames. Soon after the Russell-Howland marriage, land at Rotherhithe was leased to a firm of shipwrights, the Wells family, for making the 'Great Wet Dock', now the Greenland Dock. From 1745 to 1763 the Dock, previously run by lessees, was administered directly by the Bedford Estate; the resultant accounts and other records have been described in a separate sub-section of the catalogue.
The Rotherhithe dock was sold in 1763 and the other Rotherhithe property in 1800-1801. The Streatham, etc., property seems to have been sold piecemeal between about 1790 and 1816; the manorial rights of Tooting Bec were sold in 1816. A small estate at Cheam, left to Lord John Russell, in 1729 by the Rev. R. L. Lloyd, was administered with the Streatham estate until it was sold tothe Northey family in 1755. (See Lysons, Environs of London, I, 138).
The Bedford estates were well organized and the Bedford Office in London appears to have exercised strict control over sub-agents administering the different estates. The Covent Garden sites were originally let in the 17th century on building leases, many for 31 or 41 years and later on leases of various lengths, but most usually 21 years. Only St. Paul's Church and a 'model' range of Piazza houses were built by direct labour (by the 4th Earl), but general uniformity of height and architecture was obtained by control of the lessees under the terms of leases. Detailed lists of leases have been made for the purpose of the Survey of London volume on Covent Garden and reference can be made to these from the summary list. Far fewer leases of the Surrey properties have been preserved.
Many accounts and vouchers have survived for both Covent Garden and Surrey estates. Surviving estate papers and correspondence are numerous, but patchy except for the last period of Covent Garden papers, from about 1870 onwards. There is a large collection of 19th century architects' plans and drawings for the Covent Garden area and the Market.
One feature of interest is that produce was regularly sent from the Streatham estate to London, by waggons which sometimes brought back plants, young trees, etc., while wood for burning was sent to the Bedford Office in London and rubbish collected by the empty waggons. Very possibly more stray records relating to the Covent Garden and Surrey estates may emerge from the Bedford Office or from Woburn.
Repository
Archival history
'Deeds of several manors, rectories, advowsons and hereditaments, late the estate of the Revd Mr Lloyd' in Nonsuch alias Cuddington, Ewell, and West and East Cheam. These were handed over in 1755 to the purchaser, Edward Northey, Esq. (note in Bedford Office Register II, p. 1264, dated 1763), but are recorded in some detail on pp. 1264-1271 of Register II, of which photocopies are held by LMA. The originals, except for a few which are missing, are now deposited with the Guildford Borough Muniment Room, as records of the Northey family, ref. 10. and not at L.M.A.
Records (unnumbered) mainly concerning litigation by Lloyd family for recovery of tithes in Nonsuch alias Cuddington These records were handed over in 1755 to Edward Northey, Esq. (note in Bedford Office Register A, p. 254) but are described in some detail on pp. 248-254 of Register A, of which photocopies are held by L.M.A. The present location of the original documents is unknown; they are not among records of the Northey family now deposited in the Guildford Borough Muniment Room, nor are they at London Metropolitan Archives. See also S/T/II/F.
GB 0074 E/BER 1552-1922 Collection 80.84 linear metres (approx. 1900 files). Russell , family , Dukes of Bedford
The history of the Covent Garden estate will be found in full detail in Vol. XXXVI of the Survey of London (St. Paul, Covent Garden). The land, originally an orchard of Westminster Abbey (hence Convent or Covent Garden) was acquired from the Crown by John Russell, first Earl of Bedford (c.1485-1555) in 1552, and developed between 1630 and 1641 by Francis Russell, fourth Earl (1593-1641) between 1630 and 1641, as the first planned housing scheme in London. Inigo Jones appears to have been largely responsible for planning the lay-out, the central feature of which was an Italian-style 'piazza', the first London square, which later became Covent Garden Market. Many of the records relate to the development of the Market, which was leased by the Bedford Estate during the late 17th and 18th centuries, but actually administered by the Estate during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Other records concern Drury Lane Theatre and the Covent Garden Theatre (now Opera House).
All the property was sold by the eleventh Duke of Bedford in 1918. The Surrey estate, acquired by the Howland family of London and Streatham during the 17th century, came into the possession of the Russells through the marriage of Elizabeth Howland in 1696 to Wriothesley Russell, later second Duke of Bedford (1680-1711). The land was mainly in Streatham (the Manor of Tooting Bec) extending into Stockwell (in Lambeth) and Wandsworth and in Rotherhithe, on the Thames. Soon after the Russell-Howland marriage, land at Rotherhithe was leased to a firm of shipwrights, the Wells family, for making the 'Great Wet Dock', now the Greenland Dock. From 1745 to 1763 the Dock, previously run by lessees, was administered directly by the Bedford Estate; the resultant accounts and other records have been described in a separate sub-section of the catalogue.
The Rotherhithe dock was sold in 1763 and the other Rotherhithe property in 1800-1801. The Streatham, etc., property seems to have been sold piecemeal between about 1790 and 1816; the manorial rights of Tooting Bec were sold in 1816. A small estate at Cheam, left to Lord John Russell, in 1729 by the Rev. R. L. Lloyd, was administered with the Streatham estate until it was sold tothe Northey family in 1755. (See Lysons, Environs of London, I, 138).
The Bedford estates were well organized and the Bedford Office in London appears to have exercised strict control over sub-agents administering the different estates. The Covent Garden sites were originally let in the 17th century on building leases, many for 31 or 41 years and later on leases of various lengths, but most usually 21 years. Only St. Paul's Church and a 'model' range of Piazza houses were built by direct labour (by the 4th Earl), but general uniformity of height and architecture was obtained by control of the lessees under the terms of leases. Detailed lists of leases have been made for the purpose of the Survey of London volume on Covent Garden and reference can be made to these from the summary list. Far fewer leases of the Surrey properties have been preserved.
Many accounts and vouchers have survived for both Covent Garden and Surrey estates. Surviving estate papers and correspondence are numerous, but patchy except for the last period of Covent Garden papers, from about 1870 onwards. There is a large collection of 19th century architects' plans and drawings for the Covent Garden area and the Market.
One feature of interest is that produce was regularly sent from the Streatham estate to London, by waggons which sometimes brought back plants, young trees, etc., while wood for burning was sent to the Bedford Office in London and rubbish collected by the empty waggons. Very possibly more stray records relating to the Covent Garden and Surrey estates may emerge from the Bedford Office or from Woburn.
'Deeds of several manors, rectories, advowsons and hereditaments, late the estate of the Revd Mr Lloyd' in Nonsuch alias Cuddington, Ewell, and West and East Cheam. These were handed over in 1755 to the purchaser, Edward Northey, Esq. (note in Bedford Office Register II, p. 1264, dated 1763), but are recorded in some detail on pp. 1264-1271 of Register II, of which photocopies are held by LMA. The originals, except for a few which are missing, are now deposited with the Guildford Borough Muniment Room, as records of the Northey family, ref. 10. and not at L.M.A.
Records (unnumbered) mainly concerning litigation by Lloyd family for recovery of tithes in Nonsuch alias Cuddington These records were handed over in 1755 to Edward Northey, Esq. (note in Bedford Office Register A, p. 254) but are described in some detail on pp. 248-254 of Register A, of which photocopies are held by L.M.A. The present location of the original documents is unknown; they are not among records of the Northey family now deposited in the Guildford Borough Muniment Room, nor are they at London Metropolitan Archives. See also S/T/II/F.
Records deposited in multiple accessions between 1968 and 1971.
Records of the estates of the Russell family, Dukes of Bedford, in Covent Garden, Streatham and Rotherhithe, 16th to 19th Century. These records are of properties no longer owned by the Bedford Estate and none of them relate to Bloomsbury. The papers include title deeds, leases, abstracts of title, surveys, valuations, maps, plans, rentals, financial accounts, correspondence, legal papers, printed items, papers relating to Covent Garden market and Rotherhithe docks.
The record are arranged into 3 sub-fonds:
E/BER/CG: Covent Garden Estate;
E/BER/S: Surrey Estate;
E/BER/T: Surrey Estate.
Open access unless stated otherwise.
Copyright to this collection rests with the depositor.
English
Fit
Please see online catalogues at: http://search.lma.gov.uk/opac_lma/index.htm
There are a large number of papers relating to the Dukes of Bedford deposited at various repositories. See entry for "Russell family, Dukes of Bedford" in the National Register of Archives (available on The National Archives website).
Compiled in compliance with General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names, 1997.
Records prepared May to September 2011. Civil law Property ownership Family archives Deeds Title deeds Land management Estate management Property Property transfer Information sources Documents Primary documents Personal papers Family records People People by roles Property owners Right to property Property law Russell , family , Dukes of Bedford Covent Garden Market City of Westminster London England UK Western Europe Europe Rotherhithe Covent Garden Westminster Streatham Lambeth Southwark Legal systems Land economics Civil and political rights Agricultural economics Law Human rights
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Records deposited in multiple accessions between 1968 and 1971.
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Records of the estates of the Russell family, Dukes of Bedford, in Covent Garden, Streatham and Rotherhithe, 16th to 19th Century. These records are of properties no longer owned by the Bedford Estate and none of them relate to Bloomsbury. The papers include title deeds, leases, abstracts of title, surveys, valuations, maps, plans, rentals, financial accounts, correspondence, legal papers, printed items, papers relating to Covent Garden market and Rotherhithe docks.
Appraisal, destruction and scheduling
Accruals
System of arrangement
The record are arranged into 3 sub-fonds:
E/BER/CG: Covent Garden Estate;
E/BER/S: Surrey Estate;
E/BER/T: Surrey Estate.
Conditions of access and use area
Conditions governing access
Open access unless stated otherwise.
Conditions governing reproduction
Copyright to this collection rests with the depositor.
Language of material
- English
Script of material
- Latin
Language and script notes
English
Physical characteristics and technical requirements
There are a large number of papers relating to the Dukes of Bedford deposited at various repositories. See entry for "Russell family, Dukes of Bedford" in the National Register of Archives (available on The National Archives website).
Finding aids
Please see online catalogues at: http://search.lma.gov.uk/opac_lma/index.htm
Allied materials area
Existence and location of originals
Existence and location of copies
Related units of description
Notes area
Alternative identifier(s)
Access points
Place access points
Name access points
Genre access points
Description control area
Description identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
Compiled in compliance with General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names, 1997.
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation revision deletion
Language(s)
- English