PROPERTY SEARCH
CLAPHAM
Nelsons Clapham
129 Clapham High Street
London, SW4 7SS
T: 020 7627 6220
F: 020 7627 6221
E: clapham@nelsonslettings.com
Office Manager: Irfan Rafiq
Our Clapham branch was the First branch to open in the Nelsons group. With over 20 years combined experience amongst our staff, you can be assured that all your property needs are in good hands.
Located on Clapham High Street (next door to Sainsbury's) our location is key to our growing success. We have rapidly gained a reputation as one of the most succesfull agents in the area...
AREAS COVERED - Clapham, Balham, Clapham Junction, Battersea, Tooting, Vauxhall, Stockwell, Brixton, Camberwell, Herne Hill, Streatham Hill, Streatham Common, Dulwich.
GUIDE TO CLAPHAM - In the late seventeenth century large country houses began to be built there, and throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth century it was favoured by the wealthier merchant classes of the City of London, who built many large and gracious houses and villas around Clapham Common and in the Old Town.
Samuel Pepys spent the last two years of his life in Clapham, living with his friend, protégé at the Admiralty and former servant William Hewer, until his death there in 1703. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries the Clapham Sect were a group of upper class (mostly evangelical Anglican) social reformers who lived around the Common. They included William Wilberforce, Henry Thornton and Zachary Macaulay, father of the historian Thomas Macaulay, as well as William Smith, M.P., the dissenter and Unitarian. They were very prominent in campaigns for the abolition of slavery and child labour, and for prison reform. They also promoted missionary activities in Britain's colonies.
After the coming of the railways, Clapham developed as a suburb for commuters into central London, and by 1900 it had fallen from favour with the upper classes. Most of their grand houses had been demolished by the middle of the twentieth century, though a few remain around the Common and in the Old Town, as do a substantial number of fine late eighteenth and early nineteenth century houses. In the twentieth century, Clapham was seen as an unremarkable suburb, often cited as representing the ordinary people: hence the so-called "man on the Clapham omnibus". Clapham was located in the county of Surrey until the creation of the County of London in 1889. It became part of the new Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth in 1900. In 1965, Clapham was transferred to the London Borough of Lambeth.
