Brokers Mortgage in Chelsea, SW3

These Brokers Mortgage companies are located in Chelsea
The following Brokers Mortgage are the ones that we have found closest to Chelsea
Wileman Bruce
Company Type: Financial Adviser
St. James Cl
, KT3 6DU
|
Tel. 07981 885507
|
Quest Financial Services
Company Type: Financial Adviser
22 Seaforth Avenue
, KT3 6JP
|
Tel. 020 89492340
Fax. 020 89492340
|
S K Business Systems
Company Type: Brokers Mortgage
2/Laings Corner
, CR4 2JA
|
Tel. 020 86404635
Fax. 020 86404635
|
Paul Joslin Associates
Company Type: Independent Mortgage Advice
Viceroy Suite 1/Justin Plaza 3
, CR4 4BE
|
Tel. 0845-230 7654
Fax. 0845-230 7654
|
Just Mortgages
Company Type: Mortgages
68 Monarch Parade
, CR4 3HB
|
Tel. 020 86876646
Fax. 020 86876646
|
Mortgage Minds
Company Type: Mortgage Advisors
2 Alexandra Rd
, CR4 3LT
|
Tel. 0870-330 4454
|
Priestfield Webber
Company Type: Brokers Mortgage
242-244 London Rd
, CR4 3HD
|
Tel. 020 84040009
|
Drummonds
Company Type: Mortgage Advisors
99 High Street
, CR7 8RY
|
Tel. 020 86832900
Fax. 020 86832900
|
I M S
Company Type: Mortgage Advisors
20 Church Hill
, CR8 3QN
|
Tel. 020 8763 2000
|
Mortgage Link
Company Type: Brokers Mortgage
33 Upper Tooting Road
, SW17 7TR
|
Tel. 020 87678487
|
GL Financial Services
Company Type: Mortgage Brokers
239 Mitcham Road
, SW17 9JG
|
Tel. 020 86722333
Fax. 020 86722333
|
24-7 Mortgage
Company Type: Mortgage Brokers
Westover Road
, SW18 2RQ
|
Tel. 07017 435410
|
Independent Mortgage Advice in towns near Chelsea, SW3
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Places of interest in Chelsea, SW3
Tom's Kitchen is a restaurant on Cale Street in London's Chelsea. It opened in November 2006 and is Tom Aikens' second restaurant as proprietor.
By 1694, Chelsea ? always a popular location for the wealthy, and once described as "a village of palaces" ? had a population of 3,000. Even so, Chelsea remained rural and served London to the east as a market garden, a trade that continued until the 19th-century development boom which caused the district to finally absorb into the metropolis. The street crossing what was known as "Little Chelsea", Park Walk, linked Fulham Road to King's Road and continued to the Thames and Local Ferry down Lover's Lane, renamed "Milmans Street" in the 18th century.
The house is a typical Georgian terraced house, a modestly comfortable home where the Carlyles lived with one servant and Jane's dog, Nero. They received visitors such as Charles Dickens, Alfred Lord Tennyson and George Eliot. The house was opened to the public in 1895, just fourteen years after Carlyle's death. It is preserved very much as it was when the Carlyles lived there despite another resident moving in after them with her scores of cats and dogs. It is a good example of a middle class Victorian home due to the efforts of devotees tracking down much of the original furniture owned by the Carlyles. It contains some of the Carlyles' books (many on permanent loan from the London Library, which was established by Carlyle), pictures and personal possessions, together with collections of portraits by artist such as James Abbott McNeill Whistler and Helen Allingham and memorabilia assembled by their admirers.
"Africa" group
by William Theed
The Hall was originally supposed to have been called The Central Hall of Arts and Sciences, but the name was changed by Queen Victoria to Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences when laying the foundation stone as a dedication to her deceased husband and consort Prince Albert. It forms the practical part of a national memorial to the Prince Consort - the decorative part is the Albert Memorial directly to the north in Kensington Gardens, now separated from the Hall by the heavy traffic along Kensington Gore.
Information by Wikipedia.com