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Frognal is a small area of , in the London Borough of Camden. Frognal is reinforced as the name of a minor road, which goes uphill from and at its upper end is in the west of Hampstead village.


History
The first reference to Frognal is as a tenement in the 15th century, probably on the site of the later Frognal House (now 99 Frognal). By the mid-eighteenth century it was a significant settlement, sought after by eminent lawyers, and development continued through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Frognal And The Central Demesne at British History Online. Accessed 10 January 2013

The organist at St Andrew's Presbyterian Church was the father of composer .Ivan Moody. "Tavener, John", Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 13 November 2013


Architecture
Frognal has a diverse architecture, with many architecturally notable buildings. The central area, lacking large council estates, has undergone less change than some other parts of Hampstead. University College School, an independent day school founded in 1830, relocated to Frognal (the road) in 1907. Frognal Grove, Grade II listed, (1871–72) was a large house inherited by the architect George Edmund Street, who made additions to it. It was later subdivided into four semi-detached houses.


Notable residents
  • , musicologist, lived at 106 Frognal from the 1940s onwards.
  • Sir , the author, lived at 106 Frognal, and died at 18 Frognal Gardens in 1901.
  • , the tenor and , the soprano, lived at Frognal Cottage, 102 Frognal, from 1949 to 1952.
  • (1921–1957), the horn player, lived at 37 Frognal.
  • (1912–1953), the contralto, lived at 2 Frognal Mansions, 97 Frognal, from 1942.
  • , restaurant and hotel owner (Trust House Forte) lived at Greenaway Gardens in Frognal.
  • The Labour Party leader lived at 16 Frognal Gardens and ran a salon of influence in the 1940s, and as Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1950.
  • General Charles de Gaulle lived from 1942 to 1944 in 99 Frognal.
  • (1846–1901), the illustrator, lived at 39 Frognal in a house designed for her by Richard Norman Shaw in 1885.
  • , the ballerina, lived at 108 Frognal in the 1950s.
  • E. V. Knox (1881–1971), the editor of Punch, lived at 110 Frognal from 1945.
  • The Labour Party leader (1836-1937) lived at Upper Frognal Lodge (103 Frognal) from 1925 until his death.
  • William Page, historian and general editor of the Victoria County History, lived at Frognal Cottage (now 102 Frognal) from 1906 until 1922.
  • Sir Bernard Spilsbury (1877–1947), the pathologist, died at 20 Frognal.
  • , the actor, died at 69 Frognal in 1967.
  • , the actor, lived at 8 Frognal Gardens.


Nearest places
Overlapping (in many definitions):


Rail and London Underground stations


See also
  • One Oak, Frognal
  • Shepherd's Well, Frognal Way
  • Sun House, Frognal
  • University College School
  • Basil Feldman, Baron Feldman of Frognal
  • Susan Garden, Baroness Garden of Frognal


Further reading

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