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No. 4 St James's Place, from where Frédéric Chopin left for the Guildhall on 16 November 1848 for his last public performance. Joseph Addison (1672–1719), author and politician who founded The Spectator, lived here in 1710. [3] Eustace Budgell (1686–1737), English writer and politician. [3]
20 St James's Place, St James's Street: 1942 Yachting enthusiasts Admitted Royal Over-Seas League (formerly the Over-Seas Club) 1910 4 Park Place, St James's: 1921 Commonwealth citizens, affiliate membership available for other nationalities; music and the arts; travellers. Since beginning Royal Society of Medicine: 1805 1 Wimpole Street 1910
These are lists of place names, i.e. lists of places mainly ordered by place name. Subcategories This category has the following 12 subcategories, out of 12 total.
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12 St James's Square St James's SW1Y 4RB 1992 () 599 : Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936) "poet and story writer lived here 1889–1891" 43 Villiers Street Charing Cross WC2N 6NE 1957 () 286 : The plaque replaces a London County Council plaque from 1940. [23] Field-Marshal Earl Kitchener of Khartoum, K.G. (1850–1916) "Lived here 1914–15"
This is a List of Mormon place names, meaning towns and other places named, in modern times, after places and people in the Book of Mormon, after Mormon leaders during the settlement of Utah, or after other elements of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' history.
St James's Market, St James's Place, St James's Square, St James's Street and Little St James's Street – all from St James's Palace, [41] built on the site of the medieval St James's leper hospital which was dedicated to St James the Less, apostle and Bishop of Jerusalem, [2] [3] or, according to Sheila Fairfield, writing in The Streets of ...
In 1997 J. Rothschild Assurance merged with – and took on the name of – a much smaller entity, St. James's Place Capital. [13] The business was restructured and transferred to a new legal entity in 2000, when Halifax plc (formerly the Halifax Building Society) took a 60 per cent shareholding for £760 million. [14]