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John Wood's Star
By Andrew Swift
Reprinted with kind
permission from the the Bath Magazine Issue 35
August 2005. (all rights rederved, Bath Magazine
2005).
On the northern corner of Alfred Street,
there was once a tavern and pleasure garden
called the Hand & Flower. Opened some time
before 1747, its grounds extended north almost
as far as Julian Road, and east to where Saville
Row and Russell Street run today. With few
buildings to spoil the view, it must have been a
wonderful spot. It fell victim to the northward
expansion of the city in the 1773. But, if John
Wood’s plans for the area had been realised, it
might still have been there. In Tobias
Smollett’s novel Humphrey Clinker (1771), that
archetypal grumpy old man, Matthew Bramble,
writes to a friend from Bath:
The same artist who planned the Circus has
likewise projected a Crescent; when that is
finished, we shall probably have a Star.
This has always been treated as a joke. But
was it? Smollett knew and admired John Wood, who
designed the Circus. He also admired his son,
John Wood the Younger, who took over the project
after his father’s death in 1754. What if there
were plans to build a Star? And where would it
have been?
There are three exits from the Circus. The
first leads to Queen Square, the second to the
Royal Crescent, the third – nowhere in
particular. Shortly after leaving the Circus,
Bennett Street kinks to the right and runs along
to a T Junction with Lansdown Road. It has been
like that for so long, nobody asks why the Woods
– those masters of the grand gesture – came up
with something so banal.

A map of around 1772,
showing the Assembly Rooms (A) and the Hand &
Flower (B). Even at this date, there was nothing
to prevent Bennett Street being extended to the
Lansdown Road crossroads to create a Star.
The likely answer is that they intended the
street to lead to an architectural showpiece to
rival Queen Square or the Royal Crescent. If it
had continued in a straight line, it would have
met Lansdown Road at its crossroads with Julian
Road and Guinea Lane – to create a five-pointed
Star. The distances from the Circus to Queen
Square, the Royal Crescent, and the Lansdown
Road crossroads are roughly the same, which
suggests that this was planned from the start.
And it is a curious coincidence that a pub built
just below the crossroads in the 1760s should
have been called the Star.
Finding a location for John Wood’s Star is
one thing; trying to imagine what it would have
looked like is much more difficult. The chances
are that, like the Royal Crescent, it would have
had have had extensive views. Which brings us
back to the Hand & Flower grounds. John Wood the
Younger may have had his eye on this for
building, but it is more likely that he wanted
to keep it – as well as the land on the other
side of the road – as an open space. It was
surely with this in mind that he planned his
Assembly Rooms.
The new Pevsner Architectural Guide to Bath
echoes the prevailing view when it describes the
Assembly Rooms as “a large and noble block,
tucked away behind the Circus in an
unimaginative urban arrangement.” It was not
John Wood the Younger’s imagination that was at
fault, however. He designed his Assembly Rooms
to be viewed from the east. Take away the card
room he stuck onto the east end when his grand
design had been hemmed in by buildings, imagine
seeing it across verdant lawns, and you have a
truly imposing building.
It was John Wood the Younger’s arch-enemy,
Thomas Atwood, who scuppered his plans. Unlike
the Woods, Atwood knew how to work the system.
He was not only a councillor but also the city
architect. Between 1755 and 1775, he built
Bladud’s Buildings and the Paragon. Although
visible from the Hand & Flower grounds, they did
not stand in the way of John Wood the Younger’s
plans.

The southern part of Oxford
Row, built on the Hand & Flower grounds in 1773.
However, between 1770 and 1773, a new terrace
– Belmont – was built on the east side of
Lansdown Road, blocking the view from the Hand &
Flower grounds. The architect is unknown, but it
was probably Atwood. Atwood’s next move put paid
to John Wood the Younger’s plans altogether. The
council owned the freehold of the Hand & Flower
grounds. In March 1773, Atwood persuaded them to
dispossess the leaseholder, a Mr Rogers, and
transfer the lease to him. Within weeks, the
grounds were transformed into a building site.
Oxford and Saville Rows, the north side of
Alfred Street, the east end of Bennett Street,
and the east side of Russell Street were the
result. All John Wood the Younger could do was
to follow the lines Atwood had laid down,
continue Bennett Street towards the Circus, and
build houses on the south side of Alfred Street
and the west side of Russell Street.

The east front of the
Assembly Rooms, intended to look out across
verdant lawns, is tucked away down a narrow
alley.
Today, this area, although full of perfectly
respectable Georgian buildings, lacks the visual
excitement of Queen Square, the Circus, or the
Royal Crescent. It is, simply, unimaginative.
And while praise for the interior of the
Assembly Rooms is matched by lack of enthusiasm
for its exterior, its intended façade is hidden
away down a narrow alley. How different it could
have been if the Woods’ scheme had not been
scuppered by eighteenth-century insider dealing.
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