Residents have included: •
John Byng (1741), executed Vice-Admiral, Royal Navy. His home was decorated by architect
Isaac Ware •
Horace Walpole 1779 until 1797 death—at No.11 •
George Canning, Prime Minister (1827)—at No.50 •
Winston Churchill—at No.48 as a child • Lady
Isabella Finch-at No.44 until 1771, a
Lady of the Bedchamber to
Princess Amelia •
Robert Clive of India—bought No.45 in 1761, where he died in 1774 •
Sarah Child Villiers, Countess of Jersey (Lady Jersey), one of the famous patronesses of
Almack's and leaders of the
ton during the
Regency era; heiress to the
Child & Co. banking fortune—at No.38 •
Charles Rolls, co-founder of Rolls-Royce, born here 1877 •
50 Berkeley Square used to be occupied by
Maggs Brothers Antiquarian Booksellers. At
Lansdowne House, formerly on the square: •
John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute,
Prime Minister (1762–63) •
William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne (later 1st
Marquess of Lansdowne), prime minister (1782–83) •
William Pitt the Younger, prime minister (1783–1801, 1804–1806) •
William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor, richest man in America at the time (1891–1893) •
Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery, Liberal statesman and Prime Minister (1894–1895) •
Harry Gordon Selfridge, founder of the
Selfridges department store Fictional residents •
P.G. Wodehouse's character
Bertie Wooster lives near Berkeley Square in a Berkeley St. flat along with his
valet Jeeves, not far from the
Drones Club. •
Harry Flashman, the vicious bully of
Tom Brown's School Days and anti-hero of the
Flashman Papers, had a marital home here with his wife Elspeth. • Cathy Lane, Patty Lane's "identical cousin", is said to have lived here in the theme song to
The Patty Duke Show. •
50 Berkeley Square is allegedly haunted. • "Tomlinson", the title character of
Rudyard Kipling's 1891 satirical poem, "gave up the ghost at his house in Berkeley Square". • Peter Standish, a character from the play
Berkeley Square written by
John Balderston, about a Yankee who lives in a house on the square and is transported back to the 18th century. The play was produced as a
movie in 1933, with
Leslie Howard, and in
1951, and on television in 1959. • In the 1949 comedy film
Kind Hearts and Coronets, Lady Agatha D'Ascogne is made to fall to her death in Berkeley Square to accommodate a clever poetic parody. • Lady Emily Ashton, created by author
Tasha Alexander, lives primarily in her Berkeley Square residence during the Victorian period. • The Marquis of Alverstoke, the main male character from the novel
Frederica by
Georgette Heyer. • The Stanton-Lacy family live in Berkeley Square, as seen in the novel
The Grand Sophy, also by Heyer. • The 1998 television miniseries
Berkeley Square focussed on three wealthy
Edwardian families and their staff living in the square. • One of
Peter Cheyney's main characters,
private detective Slim Callaghan, had his office on Berkeley Square. ==Transport==