'Pall Mall' (/pæl mæl/) is a street in the
City of Westminster,
London, situated in
SW1 and parallel to
The Mall, from St. James's Street across
Waterloo Place to
the Haymarket; while 'Pall Mall East' continues into
Trafalgar Square. The street is a major thoroughfare in the
St James's area of London, and a section of the regional
A4 road.
Pall Mall is best known for being the home to various
gentlemen's clubs built in the
19th century and early 20th centuries. These include the
Athenaeum,
Travellers Club,
Reform Club,
United Services Club,
Oxford and Cambridge Club and
Royal Automobile Club. It was also once the centre of the fine art scene in London; in 1814 the
Royal Academy, the
National Gallery and
Christie's auction house were all here, but none of them stayed for long
[1].
The freehold of nearly all of the southern side of the Pall Mall has belonged to the crown for several hundred years, and is still owned by the
Crown Estate.
St. James's Palace is on the south side of the street at the western end.
Marlborough House, which was once a royal residence, is next to it to the east, opening off of a courtyard just to the south of the street. The
Prince Regent's Carlton House once stood at the eastern end of the street. Pall Mall was also once the home of the
War Office, with which it became synonymous (just as
Whitehall refers to the administrative centre of the
UK government). The War Office was based in a complex of buildings based on the ducal mansion of
Cumberland House which was designed by
Matthew Brettingham and
Robert Adam.
There were at least two other architecturally important ducal residences in the street,
Schomberg House, and
Buckingham House, the London residence of the
Dukes of Buckingham and Chandos which was rebuilt for them by Sir
John Soane (not to be confused with the Buckingham House which became
Buckingham Palace).
Trivia

View westwards along Pall Mall at sunset from the traffic island outside the Athanaeum Club
★ The name of the street is derived from "
Pall mall" a mallet-and-ball game that was played there during the
17th century.
★ The first public
street lighting with gas was installed on the Pall Mall in January of 1807.
★ In the London version of
Monopoly, Pall Mall is a property in the pink set (along with
Whitehall and
Northumberland Avenue) and is worth
£140 (which is oddly low for a street in a district whose exclusive status has never been in doubt).
See also
★
Schomberg House
★
List of London's gentlemen's clubs
External links
1. Illustration of building facades along the street in 1814 (297k GIF format)
★
Introductory page from the Survey of London - see also
here for the ''
Survey of London's chapters on each of the principal buildings in the street, and
here for its diagrams showing the north and south sides in 1814 and the south side in 1960.
★
Pall Mall on TourUK
★
Panoramic photograph of Pall Mall
★
19th Century Gentleman's Clubs on Pall Mall (including photographs)