Lord North Street in central London is a short street dating from 1722 of Georgian[1] terraced housing running between Smith Square and Great Peter Street in Westminster, the political heartland of British government. As such the properties have always commanded high fees and featured in many dramatic storylines.[2]
Past residents include the English man of letters Maurice Baring (at North Cottage, No 6, North Street),[3] socialite Sibyl Colefax,[4] founder of the Colefax and Fowler fabrics and wallpaper company,[5] and Harold Wilson, twice Prime Minister who in November 1974 alleged that renegade MI5 operatives had broken into his home.[6]
^‘Colefax , Sibyl Sophie Julia, Lady Colefax (1874–1950)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Davenport-Hines,R. (Oxford, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004) ISBN0-19-861411-X