Earls Terrace is a street in Kensington, London, W8. It has houses on one side only, a terrace of 25 Georgian houses, built in 1800–1810, all of which are Grade II listed.[1] Numbers 1 and 25, at the ends of the terrace, are converted into flats.[2]
The entire terrace of 23 houses[clarification needed] was redeveloped by Northacre, adding underground parking and "leisure facilities" that include swimming pools.[3]
The communal garden is 0.5057 hectares (1.250 acres) in size, and is not open to the public.[4]
No. 12: Walter Pater (1839—1894), essayist, literary and art critic, and writer of fiction, lived at no. 12 from 1885 to 1893. George du Maurier, English novelist, author of the 1894 novel Trilby and cartoonist for Punch, also lived here in 1867–1870. George MacDonald (1824–1905), Scottish author, poet, Christian minister, lived here from September 1863 to 1867. Amongst his many guests were John Ruskin and Lewis Carroll. MacDonald's family had already read a draft of Alice’s Adventures Under GroundArchived 29 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine and encouraged Carroll to publish it as he records in his Diary for May 9, 1863. In 1865 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland was finally published.
No. 14: Thomas Daniell (1749–1840), English landscape painter, lived and died at no. 14.