The area takes its name from
Thomas Read Kemp's
Kemp Town residential estate of the early 19th Century, but the one-word name now refers to an area larger than the original development and is traditionally called '''King's Cliff'''. Much of the housing is slightly later but still of the
Regency style, although there is also
Victorian architecture and some more modern buildings. Conversions of grand Regency buildings into flats and bars has provided Kemptown with some distinctive properties; one club is housed within the
Sassoon Mausoleum, the former burial chamber of
Edward Sassoon. In the nineteenth century, Kemptown was home to the Brighton Institute for
Deaf and Dumb Children, at 127-132 Eastern Road (now demolished), opposite
Brighton College. One of its inmates was
Richard Aslatt Pearce, the first deaf ordained
Anglican clergyman. Since 1950, the locality has given its name to the
Brighton Kemptown parliamentary constituency, covering a wider area of eastern Brighton and at times Peacehaven. ==Location and surrounding areas==