Caius Gabriel Cibber was the architect of the Danish church, built in the centre of the Square in 1696. He was the father of the playwright
Colley Cibber. According to the website www.poetsgravesco.uk, Colley Cibber was buried in either this church or
Grosvenor Chapel, Mayfair. The church was demolished in 1870. The Danish Church was depicted in paintings many times. The scientist and mystic
Emanuel Swedenborg (1688–1772) lived in the square during the last year of his life. When Swedenborg came from Sweden to London in 1710, he attended the Swedish church in Princes Square, which used to be located to the east of Wellclose Square. The area is now called Swedenborg Gardens, and the tower block overlooking Wellclose Square is called Stockholm House. Swedenborg arrived in the same year as the Ulrika Eleonora Church was built in Princes Square. He was buried there. It closed in 1910, and in 1912/13 his remains were transferred to Uppsala Cathedral in Sweden. The church was demolished in 1921.
Hayyim Samuel Jacob Falk (1708–1782), a Rabbi and Kabbalist, moved to Wellclose Square in 1742 after narrowly escaping being burnt at the stake by the authorities in Westphalia who charged him with sorcery. He was known as the "Baal Shem of London" because of his reputation as a practical Kabbalist who worked miracles and appeared to have magical powers.
Thomas Day (1748–1789) was born in Wellclose Square. He was a poet who wrote, with
John Bicknell,
The Dying Negro about the death of a runaway slave. Later he wrote
The History of Sandford and Merton (1783).
John Thomas Quekett (1815 - 1861) was a pioneering histologist. His brother
Edwin lived at 50 Wellclose Square. John moved in with his brother. In 1839 John founded the
Royal Microscopical Society. He was conservator of the
Hunterian Museum until his death. Dr
Nathaniel Bagshaw Ward (1791 - 1868) invented the terrarium (a dry version of an aquarium). He invented it about 1829, because his ferns were being poisoned by the London air. It also went by the name
Wardian case. Starting in 1857, William Smith and Charles Eaton made lead-cast forgeries of antiquities. The letters were meaningless jumbles, which made them easy to detect as forgeries. A dealer in the City Road bought many of these
Shadwell forgeries. Eaton died in 1879 in Wellclose Square. == Notable places ==