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A street, locality and entrance to Kensington Gardens located halfway along Bayswater Road, so called in honour of Queen Victoria,
in her guise as the Duchess of Lancaster. The station is actually sited opposite Marlborough Gate, just to the east. In its
heyday, Lancaster Gate’s Christ church was nicknamed ‘the thousand pound church’ because of the large sums
collected from the wealthy Bayswater congregation every Sunday. Dry rot led to the demolition of the body of the church in
1978 and the spire now finds itself attached to an ecclesiastical-looking block of flats. Lancaster Gate is Britain’s
most densely populated ward, with almost 100 persons per acre. The ward has a high proportion of young, well-educated, single
residents living alone in privately rented accommodation. There are very few families with children or households with more
than one pensioner.
Lytton Strachey, the eminent biographer, spent 25 years at 69 Lancaster Gate, while JM Barrie lived around the corner at 100
Bayswater Road. For over seventy years Lancaster Gate was the home of the Football Association, the governing body of English
football. The FA relocated to Soho Square in December 2000, selling its old building to property developers for £7¼ million.
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