Charlotte Square is a garden square in Edinburgh, Scotland, part of the New Town, designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The square is located at the west end of George Street and was intended to mirror St. Andrew Square in the east. The gardens, one of the collection of New Town Gardens, are private and not publicly accessible.
In 1939 a very sizable air-raid shelter was created under the south side of the gardens, accessed from the street to the south.
In 2013 the south side was redeveloped in an award-winning scheme by Paul Quinn, creating major new office floorspace behind a restored series of townhouses.
Edinburgh Collegiate School was located in Charlotte Square.
In 1861 a plan was drawn up by Robert Matheson, Clerk of Works for Scotland for a larger, more square garden, centred upon a memorial to the recently deceased Prince Albert, the consort of Queen Victoria.
The commission for the sculpture was granted in 1865 to Sir John Steell. The main statue features an equestrian statue of the prince, in field marshal's uniform, dwarfing the four figures around the base. It was unveiled by Queen Victoria herself in 1876.Gunnis, Rupert. Dictionary of British Sculptors, 1660-1857 The stone plinth was designed by the architect David Bryce and the four corner figures are by David Watson Stevenson (Science and Learning/Labour), George Clark Stanton (Army and Navy) and William Brodie (Nobility). The statue was originally intended to go in the centre of the eastern edge of the garden, facing down George Street.Monuments and monumental inscriptions in Scotland: The Grampian Society, 1871
This remodelling featured major new tree-planting which took many years to re-establish.
The central open space is a private garden, available to owners of the surrounding properties. For many years in the last three weeks in August each year Charlotte Square gardens was the site of the Edinburgh International Book Festival. They have since moved across town to the Edinburgh Futures Institute.
The railings around the gardens were removed in 1940 as part of the war effort. The current railings date from 1947. Changes to street levels, contours and surfacing to accommodate modern traffic caused controversy in the late 1950s and early '60s.Greenwood Tree, "George and Charlotte, The Old Squares", in Thomson, David Cleghorn (ed.), Saltire Review, Vol. 6, No. 22, Autumn 1960, The Saltire Society, Edinburgh, pp. 9 - 14
West Register House, formerly St. George's Church, forms the centre of the west side. It was designed by the architect Robert Reid in 1811, broadly to Adam's plan. The church opened in 1814 and was converted to its current use in 1964. It is one of the main buildings of the National Records of Scotland.
| North | 4 | Sir Alexander Hugh Freeland Barbour lived at no.4 (previously occupied by Rev Dr David Aitken FRSE) |
| 4 | "Rev Dr David Aitken" FRSE | |
| 5 | Sir James Fergusson, 4th baronet (1765-1838) lived at no.5 | |
| 5 | Robert Nasmyth FRSE, dentist to Queen Victoria (1792-1870) | |
| 6 Bute House, Official Residence of the First Minister of Scotland | Sir Mitchell Mitchell-Thomson, 1st BaronetEdinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1905-6 | |
| Sir John Sinclair, 1st Baronet | ||
| Catherine Sinclair, novelist | ||
| 7, The Georgian House | Charles Neaves, Lord Neaves | |
| Rev Alexander Whyte, Minister of St. George's West Free Church in Shandwick Place was resident in 1901 | ||
| 8 | Thomas R Ronaldson, General Practitioner, was resident in 1901, together with his son Thomas Martine Ronaldson, artist | |
| 9 | Patrick Robertson, Lord Robertson | |
| James Syme, Surgeon | ||
| Joseph Lister, Son-in-law of James Syme | ||
| Sir Douglas Archibald Seton-Steuart, 5th and final Seton-Steuart baronet was resident in 1901 | ||
| 10 | James Begbie, Surgeon | |
| 11 | Æneas MacBean WS | |
| West | 12 | James Joseph Hope-Vere Member of Parliament for Linlithgowshire, 1743-68 |
| James Morton Robertson wine Merchant was resident in 1901 | ||
| 13 | William Fettes, Scottish Businessman whose bequest led to the foundation of Fettes College | |
| George Hunter MacThomas Thoms, Advocate, Sheriff, eccentric, and posthumous benefactor of St Magnus Cathedral. | ||
| Francis Mitchell Caird, President of the Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh | ||
| 14 | Lord Cockburn, Whig lawyer, historian and conservationist and afterwards Georbge Moir | |
| 15 | Charles Alfred Cooper, editor of The Scotsman | |
| 16 | Patrick Heron Watson, surgeon and pioneer of anaesthetic development and modern dentistry was resident in 1901 | |
| 17 | Viscount Haldane was born at No.17. | |
| 17 | James Wolfe Murray, Lord Cringletie in the 1830s | |
| 19 | Lord Torphichen | |
| Thomas Grainger Stewart, president of the Royal College of Physicians. His widow was present in 1901. | ||
| 20 | Prof John Batty Tuke then John Clarence Webster | |
| 22 | James Ritchie | |
| South | 24 | The birthplace of Field Marshal Earl Haig |
| 25 | Adam Duff, Sheriff of Midlothian | |
| Sir John Halliday Croom FRSEEdinburgh and Leith Post Office directory 1901-2 | ||
| 26 | Prof John Chiene, Professor of Surgery at Edinburgh University | |
| 27 | Sir Alexander Gibson-Maitland of Cliftonhall | |
| 28 | David Boyle, Lord Boyle | |
| 29 | Dr David Berry Hart | |
| 30 | Dr James Matthews Duncan then Prof William Rutherford Sanders | |
| 31 | William Adam of Blair Adam then Thomas Annandale | |
| East | 33 | Sir Alexander C Gibson-Maitland of Clifton Hall |
| 34 | Archibald Campbell Swinton Professor of Civil Law at Edinburgh University and his son Alan Archibald Campbell-Swinton television pioneer | |
| 35 | William Allan Jamieson President of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh lived and died at 35 | |
| 38 | Sir William Cunningham Dalyell, an officer in the British Royal Navy who served in the French Revolutionary Wars lived at 38 in the 1830s It was then purchased by John Learmonth. | |
| 40 | Home of the Juridical Society | |
| 44 | Robert Reid redesigned no.44 internally, as his own home. | |
| 45 | Sir Robert William Philip, pioneer in the treatment of tuberculosis was resident from 1898 until his death in 1938, but absent in 1901. Prior to this it had been the home of Dr James Macadam Hare FRSE HEICS |
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