High Street 119-119a: Difference between revisions
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'''Property''': 119-119a | '''Property''': 119-119a | ||
119 and 119a | Nos. 119 and 119a are one of two surviving houses out of five that originally stood on the land which stretched from the Kings Head to Watts Lane. They were built early in the 18th Century. The property originally belonged to Ann Cook the widow of Richard Chandler Cook, a baker. No. 119 was built at the beginning of the 18th century by George Chandler, also a baker. Following him, it was occupied by his daughter and son-in-law, Jane & William Cook. Later it was described as a ''pretty cottage with a porch'', the home of Miss Travers Dade who married Mr Tate the dentist in the early 1900s. It was still a private house in the 1920s but the downstairs rooms are now a shop and the building has been divided into several parts. | ||
The cottage is similar to 101 | The cottage is similar to nos. 101 & 103, brick built, 3-storeys with 3 windows above and 3 dormer windows in slate roof. It was still a private house in the 1920s but the downstairs rooms are now a shop and the building has been divided into several parts. | ||
No.119 1989 Mauds Removals | No. 119: In 1989, Mauds Removals office (store at rear). In 2013, Farah Kids (charity shop). | ||
119a 1989 Daytronics | No. 119a: In 1989, Daytronics (radio and television). In 2013, Teddington Hardware. | ||
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Revision as of 20:54, 6 October 2014


Road: High Street, Teddington
Property: 119-119a
Nos. 119 and 119a are one of two surviving houses out of five that originally stood on the land which stretched from the Kings Head to Watts Lane. They were built early in the 18th Century. The property originally belonged to Ann Cook the widow of Richard Chandler Cook, a baker. No. 119 was built at the beginning of the 18th century by George Chandler, also a baker. Following him, it was occupied by his daughter and son-in-law, Jane & William Cook. Later it was described as a pretty cottage with a porch, the home of Miss Travers Dade who married Mr Tate the dentist in the early 1900s. It was still a private house in the 1920s but the downstairs rooms are now a shop and the building has been divided into several parts.
The cottage is similar to nos. 101 & 103, brick built, 3-storeys with 3 windows above and 3 dormer windows in slate roof. It was still a private house in the 1920s but the downstairs rooms are now a shop and the building has been divided into several parts.
No. 119: In 1989, Mauds Removals office (store at rear). In 2013, Farah Kids (charity shop). No. 119a: In 1989, Daytronics (radio and television). In 2013, Teddington Hardware.
This page is part of the Directory of Buildings of Townscape Merit (BTMs) and Listed Buildings in Teddington assembled by the Planning and History Groups of The Teddington Society. Click on any photo for a higher resolution version. Copyright for the material on this page rests with the contributor.