Hotel Tour: Cadogan Hotel, London
I visited the Cadogan Hotel in Chelsea last year, when it was fully renovated.
The Cadogan Hotel is in the heart of one of the most beautiful areas of London.
Built by the little-known architect HB Brace, the Cadogan opened at 75 Sloane Street in 1887. Eight years later the hotel acquired and incorporated the gabled mansions immediately behind it, which had been built a little earlier in the style that Osbert Lancaster nicknamed ‘Pont Street Dutch’. One of these houses, 21 Pont Street (the upper corner of which is shown in the photo below), had been home to the actress and royal mistress Lillie Langtry.
Oscar Wilde was a frequent guest at the Cadogan, usually staying in room 118. This was the scene on 6 April 1895 of his arrest for gross indecency, commemorated in verse by John Betjeman:
“To the right and before him Pont Street
Did tower in her new built red,
As hard as the morning gaslight
That shone on his unmade bed.”
‘The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel’ (1937)
I visited the Cadogan Hotel in Chelsea last year, when it was fully renovated.
The Cadogan Hotel is in the heart of one of the most beautiful areas of London.
Built by the little-known architect HB Brace, the Cadogan opened at 75 Sloane Street in 1887. Eight years later the hotel acquired and incorporated the gabled mansions immediately behind it, which had been built a little earlier in the style that Osbert Lancaster nicknamed ‘Pont Street Dutch’. One of these houses, 21 Pont Street (the upper corner of which is shown in the photo below), had been home to the actress and royal mistress Lillie Langtry.
Oscar Wilde was a frequent guest at the Cadogan, usually staying in room 118. This was the scene on 6 April 1895 of his arrest for gross indecency, commemorated in verse by John Betjeman:
“To the right and before him Pont Street
Did tower in her new built red,
As hard as the morning gaslight
That shone on his unmade bed.”
‘The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel’ (1937)