Tufton Street, the northern part of which was known as Bowling Alley until 1870,[5] was built by Sir Richard Tufton (1585–1631), an English lawyer and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1614 and 1629.[6][7]
Composer Henry Purcell lived on or near the street (in addresses then known as St Anne's Lane from 1682 and Bowling Alley East from 1684 until 1692).[8]Colonel Blood, best known for his attempt to steal the Crown Jewels from the Tower of London, lived in Tufton Street.[9] One of London's notorious cock-fighting pits was located here until as late as 1815.[10]
No 7 Tufton Street is Faith House, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens as the Church Institute for St John's, Smith Square and built in 1905–07. The building has been described as a version of an Italianate palazzo, reinterpreted in a Georgian style. It was taken over by the Society of the Faith in 1935.[11] The vaulted, central room has occasionally been used as a concert space since the 1930s.[12]
At No 11 is the church outfitters J Wippell & Co, a business which dates back to 1834. The shop dates from 1929. The Church House, the headquarters of the Church of England, occupies the south side of Dean's Yard and is bordered by Great Smith Street, Little Smith Street and the north end of Tufton Street.[13]
No 24 Tufton Street is Mary Sumner House, the headquarters of the Mothers' Union, a worldwide Anglican women's organisation, named after its founder. The Grade II listed building, which opened in 1925, was designed by the Scottish architect Claude Ferrier.[16] Next to it to the south is the back of a large red brick church (fronting onto Marsham Street) designed by Sir Herbert Baker and A. T. Scott in 1928 for Christian Scientists. In the 1990s it became the Emmanuel Centre (a conference centre) and the Emmanuel Evangelical Church. Also backing onto Tufton Street is Romney House (47 Marsham Street), built in the 1930s by the Austro-British architect Michael Rosenauer (1884-1971).[17]
The Tufton Street drill hall is a former military installation, designed as the headquarters of the 23rd Middlesex Rifle Volunteer Corps and completed in 1899.[18]
Eleanor Rathbone, independent member of parliament and pioneer of family allowance and women's rights, lived at Tufton Court (No 47) between 1940 and 1945.[19]
The English war poet and novelist Siegfried Sassoon lived at No 54 from 1919 to 1925 (original house now demolished).[20] The film maker Sir Michael Balcon lived at 57a Tufton Street between 1927 and 1939.[21]
67 Tufton Street, originally a Post Office, was subsequently occupied by the Cabinet Office. It is now an apartment complex.[22]