Notable residents of Gower Street are listed in the Survey of London. They have included the architect
George Dance the Younger, painter
William De Morgan, and the Shaws.
John Shaw Sr., and
John Shaw Jr., formed a famous 19th-century architectural partnership. Thomas Budd Shaw was a professor of English literature to the grand dukes of Russia. The painter
John Everett Millais had a studio here. North Gower Street was also the birthplace and childhood home of the artist
Philip Zec and his 11 other siblings, although that was when it was still called George Street. On 26 March 1835, the Rev.
William Agutter died here. In March 1837,
Giuseppe Mazzini (Italian politician, journalist and activist for the unification of Italy) moved to 187 North Gower Street (at the time, 9 George Street, and now used for the filming of
Sherlock) together with Italian poet and patriot
Giovanni Ruffini, his brother Agostino Ruffini and Angelo Usiglio, living there for three years until 1840. On 29 December 1838,
Charles Darwin took the let of the furnished property at 12 Upper Gower Street (later 110 Gower Street), and wrote to tell his fiancée
Emma Wedgwood of his delight at being the "possessor of Macaw Cottage". As their daughter
Etty later recalled, "He used to laugh over the ugliness of their house in Gower St, and the furniture in the drawing-room, which he said combined all the colours of the macaw in hideous discord", and Darwin had christened the house "Macaw Cottage" in "allusion to the gaudy colours of the walls and furniture." He moved in on 31 December, and with Emma moved in on the day of their marriage, 29 January 1839. The
development of Darwin's theory of
natural selection made progress in this house, and their children
William Erasmus Darwin and
Anne Darwin were born there. In 1842 the family moved to
Down House in the
Kent countryside, and the Gower Street house became part of the warehouse system of
James Shoolbred and Company. On 13 December 1904 a
London County Council blue plaque was put up, to "Charles Darwin Naturalist". The house suffered from bomb damage in 1941 during
the Blitz, and was not repaired. In 1961 the site became part of the Biological Sciences building of
University College London, with a new plaque. The long thin garden which backed onto Gower Mews North (later Malet Place) was incorporated into Foster Court car park in 1978. The
etymologist and
philologist Hensleigh Wedgwood, who was Charles Darwin's cousin and brother-in-law, lived at 94 Gower Street; he died there in 1891. From 1869 to 1892, 102 Gower Street was the home of the barrister
William Belt who was best known for his erratic behaviour in later life which was widely reported by popular newspapapers for the amusement of their readers. On the wall of the
University College building, an elaborate wall plaque carries the legend:
"Close to this place Richard Trevithick (Born 1771 - Died 1833) Pioneer of High Pressure Steam ran in the year 1808 the first steam locomotive to draw passengers." It was erected by "The Trevithick Centenary Memorial Committee". In 1823
Charles Dickens (aged 11) lived at 4 Gower Street North when his mother opened a school there. The building was later re-numbered 147 Gower Street; the site was occupied from 2005 by the Accident and Emergency department of
University College Hospital. The
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was founded in the
Millais family house on Gower Street in the winter of 1848–49.
Millicent Fawcett, a leading figure in the constitutional wing of the British
women's suffrage movement, lived at No. 2 Gower Street (and died there in 1929). The
Walloon (
Belgian) poet
Henri Michaux briefly resided in Gower Street in February 1931. From 1976 until 1995 the headquarters of
MI5 was an anonymous grey office block at
140 Gower Street, adjacent to Euston Road. Since 2004 the site has been occupied by the western end of the
Wellcome Trust's Gibbs Building. Many of the Georgian houses on Gower Street have been converted into small hotels. File:Darwin Gower.jpg|
Charles Darwin plaque File:George Dance plaque.jpg|
George Dance plaque File:First Anaesthetic plaque.jpg|Plaque on Bonham-Carter House File: Millicent Garrett Fawcett Plaque, Gower Street, London.jpg|
Millicent Garrett Fawcett plaque ==North Gower Street==